On Mon, 01 Dec 2003 at 14:00:56 -0600, Joshua French wrote: > > I am trying to find out the difference(s) between ClamAV's virus db and > any given commercial product. In the latter, I've noted that they have > covered 70-80k viruses, whereas ClamAV has somewhere around 10k in its > definitions. > > Is this an apples and oranges comparison? Does ClamAV's 10k not include > variants in it's numbers, but does in fact cover them? > > If anyone can provide some info regarding this, that would be most > appreciated. >
I can see that Chris McKeever and Daniel J. McDonald provided some opinion on a "number of recognised viruses" topic. They are right that our priority is reacting to new viruses. We also add many signatures of older viruses when time permits. As a related note, I'm forwarding my message which I sent to "postfix-users" mailing list about quickness of adding signatures of new viruses. I spent a few hours on preparing this comparison so I think that it deserves posting here as well :-) . ========================================================================= Date: Fri, 21 Nov 2003 23:06:38 +0100 From: Tomasz Papszun <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: What's the best Anti-virus software? Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> References: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> On Tue, 18 Nov 2003 at 15:36:09 +0100, Marcel Weber wrote: > [...] > > If checking emails for virii is not too critical to you, you could give > a try to clamav. It's free, opensource and quite good (Well it gets > better from day to day ;-) ). I use it on two servers (not really high > traffic ones) together with amavisd-new with good results. It detects > about 12000 virii, compared to the 88000 virii sophos knows about. But > this covers most NEWER email virii. Of course, with sophos you get > quicker updates, as soon a new virus appears in the wild. With clamav it > takes sometimes a day or two until the signatures find their way into > the database. > I'd like to contradict the last two sentences. ClamAV adds signatures to it's database often more quickly than commercial AV scanners. As particularly Sophos was mentioned above, here you are a comparison using dates of announcements of databases updates by ClamAV and by Sophos. As examples, a few latest widely distributed viruses/trojans are used. Viruses' names used here are according to Sophos. Aliases are given in brackets. Timestamps of announcements are in GMT. virusname ClamAV Sophos ------------------------------------ --------------- --------------- W32/Sobig-F 19 Aug 10:05 19 Aug 10:48 W32/SobigF-Dam 2 Sep 19:47 5 Sep 09:28 Troj/Apdoor-A (Backdoor.Coreflood.B) 5 Sep 23:06 10 Sep 10:05 Troj/BDSinit-A (Trojan.Fakesvc.C) 24 Oct 19:29 10 Nov 16:52 W32/Holar-I (W32.Galil.C) 26 Oct 14:42 29 Oct 12:13 W32/Sober-A 26 Oct 18:08 27 Oct 05:49 W32/Sober-Enc 29 Oct 00:42 30 Oct 11:48 W32/Mimail-C (Worm.Bics) 31 Oct 12:36 31 Oct 13:20 JS/Flea-B (JS.Fortnight.Enc) 13 Nov 00:10 20 Nov 16:29 Please note that I'm not saying that Sophos' software is worse than ClamAV. I'm just giving a few facts. Sometimes one is quicker, sometimes the other. Regards -- Tomasz Papszun SysAdm @ TP S.A. Lodz, Poland | And it's only [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.lodz.tpsa.pl/ | ones and zeros. [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.ClamAV.net/ A GPL virus scanner ========================================================================= ------------------------------------------------------- This SF.net email is sponsored by: SF.net Giveback Program. Does SourceForge.net help you be more productive? Does it help you create better code? SHARE THE LOVE, and help us help YOU! Click Here: http://sourceforge.net/donate/ _______________________________________________ Clamav-users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/clamav-users