Microsoft Is Here to Save Macs from Viruses, Malware (Really)
Look
outside. Are pigs flying? Has hell frozen over? I ask because Microsoft just
announced that it's bringing its Windows Defender antivirus
software to the Mac.
Or, rather, the company is bringing Microsoft Defender to macOS, because Microsoft is rebranding the software as it takes Windows Defender beyond Windows (it's also apparently coming to Linux!). Currently available to business users in a preview version, Microsoft Defender will support macOS Mojave, macOS High Sierra and macOS Sierra machines.
Announced
in a blog post today (March 21), Microsoft Defender
scans for malware, with options for full scans, quick scans and scans of
specific directories. In the blog post, Microsoft's Eric Avena states that
"we recommend quick scans in nearly all scenarios."
The service's full name,
Microsoft Defender ATP, stems from Microsoft's recent addition of
"Advanced Threat Protection" tools for its Microsoft 365 customers,
which added automation and cross-device and cross-identity functionality.
You can review the
threats that Microsoft Defender finds, and the software will give you the
option to quarantine the files, remove them entirely or let them continue to
take up space. Advanced settings include real-time protection and
cloud-based protection.
Other basics included
will be the option to white-list directories to exclude them from scans, and to
check for Microsoft's "security intelligence updates"
automatically or manually.
Business users already using Windows Defender ATP can signup for the Mac beta version, and even request a quotation on how much the full product will
cost.
The
consumer version of Windows Defender, built into all consumer versions of
Windows 10, has caught up to the best paid antivirus programs in the most
recent third-party lab tests. We're looking forward to finding out how
Microsoft Defender for Mac does against third-party Mac antivirus software, and
against Apple's built-in XProtect antivirus software.



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