January 30, 2006 6:10 PM PST

Security consortium creates guidelines

Related Stories

180solutions drops suit against Zone Labs

January 30, 2006

Could your laptop be worth millions?

January 27, 2006
A new consortium of security companies has established guidelines for defining spyware and testing anti-spyware products.

The guidelines could help consumers determine the risks posed by new software and the effectiveness of anti-spyware products.

At a time when the number of spyware applications doubles each year, security companies are banding together to find ways to eliminate confusion about how to test security products.

"Few product testers currently document their test samples or methodology," the companies said in a statement. "Many use very small sample sets in their testing environments. As a result, there is no distinguishable benchmark for comparison."

The software makers are part of a larger organization, called the Anti-Spyware Coalition, which is working to standardize industry terms and technology for battling spyware.

Next on the group's agenda: Defining threat-naming conventions, intelligence-sharing best practices, and emergency information distribution guidelines. The group says it will use definitions already created by the Anti-Spyware Coalition.

 

Join the conversation

Add your comment

The posting of advertisements, profanity, or personal attacks is prohibited. Click here to review our Terms of Use.

Inside CNET News

1-2 of 12

Scroll Left Scroll Right

What's Hot

Discussions

Shared

RSS Feeds

Add headlines from CNET News to your homepage or feedreader.

Markets

Market news, charts, SEC filings, and more

Related quotes

Dow Jones Industrials (0.57%) 72.81 12,874.04
S&P 500 (0.68%) 9.13 1,351.77
NASDAQ (0.95%) 27.51 2,931.39
CNET TECH (0.84%) 17.13 2,049.14
  Symbol Lookup