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Vipre advanced security for mac1/31/2024 Avira, McAfee, Trend Micro, and a few others automatically enable scheduled scanning. Most users won't need to meddle with preferences, except possibly to enable scheduled scanning. Clicking a Settings gear lets you check history, quarantine, and ignored files, as well as opening the product's preferences. The main window and scan choices are just about the entirety of this product's user interface. Finally, a big Scan Now button at right reveals a new set of buttons for Quick, Full, and Custom scans. Naturally, toggling any of these off puts you in At Risk status. The middle panel has three green-glowing toggles for Active Protection, Auto-update Application, and Auto-update Threat Definitions. The big Vipre logo I mentioned resides in the left panel and reflects security status. The main window is separated into three arcs, ranging in color from dark at left to silvery-light at right. Where the Windows product’s user interface is all straight lines and rectangles, on the Mac it embraces curves and color gradients. It's worth noting that this product could hardly look more different from Vipre Advanced Security on Windows. Clicking for details gets an explanation of how to give Vipre the necessary permission, and doing so changes the orange logo to a serene green, with status "Protected." Once it launched, it displayed an orange Vipre logo with the words "At Risk." That's because the full disk access required for an antivirus to do its job is no longer a gimme in modern versions of macOS. Vipre installed without incident on the MacBook Air I use for testing. More recently, J2 Global, owner of PCMag’s publisher Ziff Davis, acquired Vipre. For example, if you click a malware notification popup for more information, you come to a page with sunbeltsecurity in the URL and several references to ThreatTrack on the page. You can still see this history in some of the product's web pages. Originally published by Sunbelt Software, its name stood for "Virus Intrusion Protection Remediation Engine." Over the years, the product was bought by GFI and then spun off as a separate company called ThreatTrack. You may be surprised to learn that Vipre has been around for more than 25 years. If you're stuck on an older OS version, perhaps due to antique hardware, you might look at ProtectWorks AntiVirus (for Mac), which both extend support back to Snow Leopard (10.6). Vipre does go farther back than some, with support for El Capitan (10.11) or later. Most Mac users keep their operating systems up to date, so the fact that many Mac antivirus products only support recent versions isn't usually a problem. Sophos Home Free (for Mac) also costs nothing, though technically it's limited to three devices per household. Avast, AVG, and Avira all offer free Mac protection. Of course, it's also possible to protect your Macs without paying a single dollar.
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