I just started as an IT support specialist here, and our Admin (my boss) told me that over the years a lot of users are still getting viruses. I was also told that they did their own tests, and when they purposely downloaded infected files, sometimes it would not even detect the infected file. They would then download a free AV and it would detect it.
Right now we are looking at ESET, so far I see a good price/price performance ratio according to various reviews/real world test results.
Just wondering, are those people using administrator level user accounts? that could be part of the reason and if they didn't that would probably help....
I just started as an IT support specialist here, and our Admin (my boss) told me that over the years a lot of users are still getting viruses. I was also told that they did their own tests, and when they purposely downloaded infected files, sometimes it would not even detect the infected file. They would then download a free AV and it would detect it.
Right now we are looking at ESET, so far I see a good price/price performance ratio according to various reviews/real world test results.
Alright...since you're new there, and your Boss already has his mind made up based on their "tests" (although I'm inclined to believe there may be some poor configuration causing it to not detect the files...but that's not for you or I to determine at this point), I guess you should just pick a new AV vendor instead of trying to fix the current situation. I'd probably be looking at McAfee, MS Forefront, Trend Micro, and Kaspersky if I were you. I have no recommendation either way...just telling you what companies I would look at.
If something isn't already in place, you may want to look at implementing a product that does AV scanning at your network edge so that it can block malicious files before they even get to your desktop. Ideally, you would be using Vendor A's virus definitions at the network edge, and Vendor B's virus definitions on your hosts. But, again, since you're new there you might not want to rock the boat too much depending on what your boss is like and whether or not he is open to other people making suggestions.
Getting experience ripping and replacing one AV with other in a corp environment is something good to get under your belt. It's not always a fun and easy task.
First things first is always to start on the ground floor and inventory your organization's current policies, practices, and processes.
A second thing, as Chiefcrowe already suggested is limited user environment and role-based access controls. These are a good way to reduce the attack surface or scope to start.
Then you should speak with whomever is in charge of IT security and discuss with them what the ramifications are, get any back-story, etc.
Sometimes managed AV is a security function or capability run by IT operations but governed by Security. You'll then need both groups to bless it (or someone to agree on ownership, or demarcation of ownership and accountability).
The size of your company, it's distribution, etc. will all play a factor in whatever is decided.
It sounds to me as if choosing a AV vendor is really the least of your problems.![]()
Thanks for this. Our company is not that big, about 70+ end users. Our IT department that does all the tech stuff is basically just three people including me (not counting programmers), so I get to do a bit of everything. We currently do not have AD setup because we only provide laptops for our end users. So basically the users probably use these laptops to do personal stuff when they are at home.
Am I reading this correctly...it is a 70+ employee company, and you don't have AD (Active Directory) set up? Your environment must be a complete nightmare to manage. Get AD set up before you go planning to switch AV software.
If the company is willing to invest in having a proper network, then you're in a great place if you can play a role in getting AD set up (even if that role is 90% learning). You have the potential to learn a lot here.
Nate_007, one question I forgot to ask. Are all these viruses coming from within the workplace, or from people who take laptops home and do "who knows what" with them?