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Video Reviews - Security and Privacy
A Cylance Smart Antivirus Quickie
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<blockquote data-quote="Libera Milanesi" data-source="post: 758303" data-attributes="member: 74385"><p>I've never had the honor of looking into Invincea X but it would definitely be an interesting spectate. Doesn't SOPHOS own it though? If I remember correctly, it's by the same company that Sandboxie was from, but then SOPHOS bought that company and starting implementing the technology into their own services whilst using their own resources to improve it.</p><p></p><p>If I am right, it should be worth noting that SOPHOS is a very valuable company, especially now. The Surfright acquisition did very well for them because of HitmanPro.Alert technology which extensively helped them with the creation of Intercept X.</p><p></p><p></p><p>Did you mean my post? I'm very sorry if you did, I wasn't trying to come off as a Cylance fan. I think they are mediocre, not any better than the other fish in the sea, but definitely not the worst.</p><p></p><p>I do not think the Smart Anti-Virus would be convenient for a novice because of its limitations (and they still need a lot more time to keep maturing and improving their data-sets) but it might be a good companion for an advanced user. For enterprise, I'd rather go elsewhere than use their enterprise version.</p><p></p><p>The Artificial Intelligence in Cylance is bound to be similar to that of what is implemented in other products by already well-known vendors. The truth is, most vendors have their own implementation of Machine Learning/Artificial Intelligence (you can slap on either names really) and most lean towards the cloud for it to lean off resource usage on the clients machine (e.g. Microsoft Azure, Amazon Web Services, etc.). The ML/Ai traditionally found in an Anti-Virus/Internet Security/Endpoint solution is going to evolve around training with a wide select of samples, causing the flagging of samples which are < or > alike the trained samples. Some forms of ML/Ai can be more complex though depending on the approach.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Libera Milanesi, post: 758303, member: 74385"] I've never had the honor of looking into Invincea X but it would definitely be an interesting spectate. Doesn't SOPHOS own it though? If I remember correctly, it's by the same company that Sandboxie was from, but then SOPHOS bought that company and starting implementing the technology into their own services whilst using their own resources to improve it. If I am right, it should be worth noting that SOPHOS is a very valuable company, especially now. The Surfright acquisition did very well for them because of HitmanPro.Alert technology which extensively helped them with the creation of Intercept X. Did you mean my post? I'm very sorry if you did, I wasn't trying to come off as a Cylance fan. I think they are mediocre, not any better than the other fish in the sea, but definitely not the worst. I do not think the Smart Anti-Virus would be convenient for a novice because of its limitations (and they still need a lot more time to keep maturing and improving their data-sets) but it might be a good companion for an advanced user. For enterprise, I'd rather go elsewhere than use their enterprise version. The Artificial Intelligence in Cylance is bound to be similar to that of what is implemented in other products by already well-known vendors. The truth is, most vendors have their own implementation of Machine Learning/Artificial Intelligence (you can slap on either names really) and most lean towards the cloud for it to lean off resource usage on the clients machine (e.g. Microsoft Azure, Amazon Web Services, etc.). The ML/Ai traditionally found in an Anti-Virus/Internet Security/Endpoint solution is going to evolve around training with a wide select of samples, causing the flagging of samples which are < or > alike the trained samples. Some forms of ML/Ai can be more complex though depending on the approach. [/QUOTE]
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