


The classical test categories are PROTECTION (protection function), PERFORMANCE (speed) and USABILITY (user-friendliness) for each product, whether it is evaluated under Windows, Android or MacOS. The experts there evaluate the lion's share of products in the market at regular intervals according to pre-determined and transparent test rules. These high numbers are already documented by the respective malware detection in the AV-ATLAS statistics tool.īut do the security products in the market really identify all variants of malware samples? Which of the solutions fulfill their promise to deliver the highest level of protection under Windows, Android or MacOS? All the answers to these questions are provided by the continuous product tests in the independent labs of the AV-TEST Institute. In their class, the products are required to detect the more than 1 billion malware samples for Windows, the 33 million dangerous apps for Android and the more than 900,000 special malware variants for MacOS. The constantly moving wave of attacks is broken by the existing security solutions for consumer users and companies under Windows, Android and MacOS.

Just how heavily the teams of attackers have geared up is also manifest in an enormous number: At the turn of the year 2022 to 2023, AV-TEST registered more than 1 billion malware samples for Windows in its database. After all, if you more closely examine why a PC of a consumer user or that of a corporate user has been hit by a cyberattack, it is normally due to carelessness, such as false trust, forgotten updates or missing security modules. Security systems and software solutions have put up a defense against mounting cyber risks, and they have done so with a high level of success. Spam and phishing also surged at times, which could hardly have been expected. Many APT groups expanded their attacks with ransomware, refining the digital blackmail of their victims with devious methods. But the year 2022 turned out completely different than expected: Botnets pounced on vulnerabilities, proliferating exploits and putting lots of servers under pressure with DDoS attacks.

A turbulent year with malware, botnets, ransomware and APT groupsĪfter cybergangsters used the year 2021 with its many pandemic challenges, such as home office or mobile office working, for attacks, some experts expected to see an ebb of cyberattacks for 2022.
