If you’re looking for a suite with a load of features, Trend Micro Titanium Internet Security 2012 (£49.95 for one year and three PCs) isn’t for you. But if you need a set-and-forget suite that will keep your PC reasonably safe, it may be the right choice.
Trend Micro’s suite fully blocked 92.3% of malware in our real-world test (which helps determine how well a suite can stop brand-new as-yet unknown malware), and it partially blocked an additional 3.8%, which is about average for a recent crop of 2012 security products we tested. In addition, it detected 97.49% of known malware samples. Although that is a decent result historically, Trend Micro lags behind rivals in this regard (most other suites we looked at detected over 99% of samples). As for false positives, it identified four safe files out of a pool of 250,000 as potentially malicious. Percentage-wise, that’s a negligible false-positive rate, though most other suites managed an even lower number.
Trend Micro’s suite is very effective at cleanup, as it detected and disabled all active infections on our test PC, and removed any and all malware traces for 70% of our test samples – better than most of its rivals.
In our testing, the cloud-based Trend Micro suite had a generally low impact on system performance. It added 1.5 seconds to system startup, and added only 0.7 seconds to PC shutdown time, as compared to our test PC with no antivirus software installed. On almost every other speed test we ran, it had a smaller-than-average impact on PC performance compared to its rivals.
Unfortunately, its scan speeds were uneven. It finished our on-demand scan of 4.5GB of files in a better-than-average 1 minute, 33 seconds, so when you manually start a scan, you shouldn’t have to wait too long for it to finish. On the other hand, it took longer to complete an on-access scan of 4.5GB (5 minutes, 14 seconds) than most other packages did. Trend Micro’s poor showing in the on-access scan – which shows how quickly a suite scans files when you open or save them – may be a concern, since it means that you’ll probably have to wait longer for files to open.
The fairly basic interface, though well designed, doesn’t offer a lot of settings or options for expert-level users. It’s great, therefore, if you’re a less-advanced user, or if you just need something that you don’t have to mess with for it to work.
Note, too, that this version of Trend Micro’s suite is a little light on features; if you like Trend Micro but want more functionality, check out Titanium Maximum Security, the company’s top-of-the-line package.
I suggest giving Trend Micro Titanium Internet Security 2012 a look, but I can’t give it an unequivocal “buy” recommendation based on its acceptable-but-not-outstanding malware detection and blocking rates.
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