Microsoft has a new system that alerts you when you're hacked
Antivirus tools are the aircraft flotation devices of PCs: They give you a false sense of security.
Despite efforts by security companies to thwart cyberattacks, hackers
keep finding new ways into unsuspecting people's computers and systems.
That's why Microsoft is adding a new feature to its Windows Defender
line of anti-hacking tools: When hackers do get in, Microsoft will help
customers identify the attacks and stop them before they spread.
Windows Defender Advanced Threat Protection isn't admitting defeat, per
se. But it's taking an important step towards coping with reality: Your
system is going to get hacked, and you'd better be prepared when it
does.
Microsoft says the new tool analyzes information from more than 1
billion Windows devices, 2.5 trillion websites and 1 million suspicious
files. When it senses an attack happening to one of its customers,
Microsoft will send a notification.
For example, the tool might detect that a suspicious IP address is
trying to connect with a device on a customer's network, and the IT guy
will get an alert.
But Windows Defender ATP will also use that intelligence to alert other
customers whose systems appear to be suffering from a similar attack
too.
"There will always be this possibility of attack," said Terry Myerson, Microsoft's Windows chief. "Instead of taking 200 days to detect, this could catch attacks very quickly."
Windows Defender ATP is available for corporate customers who have deployed Windows 10 on their PCs.
Microsoft (MSFT, Tech30)
is trying to pitch Windows 10 as a necessary upgrade for any
organization concerned about security. The Windows Defender ATP
announcement comes a couple weeks after Microsoft revealed that all 4
million of the Pantagon's PCs will be upgraded to Windows 10 within the next 12 months.
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