By
Joris Evers
Wednesday, February 08 2006 11:52 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/security/0,39044215,39310537,00.htm
Microsoft plans to ship a new security product in June, charging US$49.95 a
year to shield up to three PCs against viruses, spyware and other cyberthreats, the company said on Tuesday.
As
previously reported, Windows OneCare Live's June debut marks Microsoft's
long-anticipated entry into the consumer antivirus market. That space has long
been the domain of specialized vendors, led by Symantec and McAfee. Microsoft
announced its intent to offer antivirus products in June 2003 when it bought
Romanian antivirus software developer GeCad Software.
OneCare combines antivirus, anti-spyware and
firewall software with backup features and several tune-up tools for Windows
PCs. The product will be sold online and in stores, Microsoft said.
The software maker is following common routes to get its software into
consumers' hands. It will offer a free 90-day test period and is working on
deals with PC makers to ship OneCare on new computers, said Dennis Bonsall,
director of Windows OneCare Live at Microsoft.
Buyers can install OneCare on up to three PCs that run Windows XP with
Service Pack 2. This is a discount over rival products from Symantec and McAfee,
which charge US$119.99 and US$139.99, respectively, before rebates, for three-user
editions of their security suites. The Symantec and McAfee products are often heavily rebated.
"Up to three licenses is a real good deal," said Andrew Jaquith, an analyst
with The Yankee Group in Boston. "I think it is very consumer-friendly and a
good deal for families and SOHO (small office, home office) type businesses."
OneCare also includes support at no additional charge via e-mail, online chat
or phone, Microsoft said. This compares to oft-criticized, mostly paid-support
options from Symantec and McAfee.
Microsoft announced its plans
for OneCare in May 2005. Invited testers have been trying it out since
last July and a public
test version was released late last year. About 170,000 people are testing
OneCare. As a thank-you, testers can get a discounted rate of US$19.95 per year if
they sign up in April, Bonsall said.
Microsoft will sell OneCare on a subscription basis--a change from the
traditional way security software has been sold. As long as a subscription is
active, users will get signature and feature updates to guard against the latest
attacks. Traditionally, users paid annually for signature updates, while a
product upgrade required an additional purchase.
Symantec and McAfee sell their boxed security suite products for US$69.99,
before any rebates, and then charge an annual fee for signature updates.
However, both security companies have also been moving to a subscription model.
In addition to adding subscription options, established security software
sellers have prepared for Microsoft's market entry by adding anti-spyware to
their security suites. Symantec later this year also plans to introduce a new
product, code-named Genesis, that will be sold on a subscription-only basis
and has many of the same features as OneCare.
"If Microsoft had not combined the two, you would still see the mainstream
antivirus vendors all trying to premium-price all these things separately," Jaquith said.
Initially, OneCare will only be available in English on the U.S. market.
Microsoft plans to have test versions out in other languages within the next
year, a representative said.
The global antivirus market is growing; it reached US$3.7 billion in revenue in
2004, up 36 percent from 2003, IDC said in December. The market research outfit
forecasts the antivirus market will grow to US$7.3 billion in 2009.
With OneCare, Microsoft is targeting consumers, especially those who do not
run security or have let their current product expire. The company says it
believes 70 percent of consumers fall into that category. In a recent research
note, The Yankee Group estimated the niche as a market worth potentially US$15 billion.
The company plans to include Windows Defender, an anti-spyware program,
within Windows Vista, the update to the operating system scheduled to arrive
before the 2006 holiday sales season. However, there are no plans to bundle
antivirus software in Vista.
Microsoft is also eyeing
the enterprise security market. It is working on a new Microsoft
Client Protection product to defend business desktops, laptops and file
servers against malicious attacks.