. Pros Protects files and backups from ransomware.
Top ratings from two independent testing labs. Excellent score in our antiphishing test. No-hassle Autopilot mode.
TrafficLight browser extension marks dangerous links in search results. Cons TrafficLight currently doesn't work under the specific Safari/Google combination. Bottom Line Bitdefender Antivirus for Mac gets top marks from the independent labs and in our own hands-on testing.
BitDefender provides real-time protection against viruses, spyware and phishing. The program also includes features that can encrypt instant messenger Although the real-time virus scanner is important for protecting your computer, you might need to temporarily disable the feature when you.
With its handy Autopilot mode, you can set it, forget it, and have confidence that your Apple computer is protected against malware. The macOS product's main window resembles that of on Windows, but simplified.
There's no left-rail menu, and no secondary pages with detailed configuration for protection and privacy. A status banner occupies the top portion of the screen, with three big buttons below that launch Quick, System, and Custom antivirus scans. As with the Windows product, Bitdefender on the Mac defaults to running in Autopilot mode. That means it does its job as quietly as possible, keeping user interaction to a minimum.
If you turn off Autopilot, your security status changes and the program enjoins you to turn that feature back on. Most users shouldn't turn it off. Pricing and OS Support For $39.99 per year, you can install Bitdefender on a single Mac; raising that to $59.99 extends protection to two more systems. ESET and Kaspersky precisely match this pricing scheme. Webroot is similar, but you get three licenses for less—just $49.99.
As for, it also costs $59.99 per year, but that subscription includes protection for every macOS, Windows, Android, and iOS device you own. And Avira are totally free, which is handy if you didn't budget for Mac antivirus. Intego lists for $99.99 per year to protect three Macs. That sounds high, but it's more of a security suite than a mere antivirus. Norton is also a suite, which makes its price ($89.99 per year for five licenses) seem more reasonable. If your Mac is brand-new, it has the very latest and greatest operating system.
Good for you! But if you're running an older version, your need for antivirus is even greater.
Like, Bitdefender works on anything from Mavericks (version 10.9 of the OS) to the present. ESET goes beyond that, almost ten years back, with support starting at Snow Leopard (10.6).
Others require a much more recent version. With Avira, you need El Capitan (10.11) or better, and several others require at least Yosemite (10.10). Excellent Malware Protection Scores I have an elaborate set of hand-coded tools, developed over a period of years, that help in my hands-on testing. On a Mac, they're worth exactly nothing. Oh, I can run a few tests manually, but for the most part I have to rely on reports from the major labs. Five of the labs report on Windows antivirus products, just two on Mac products Both the testing labs that I follow for macOS antivirus include Bitdefender in their testing roster, and both give it excellent scores. Like all the products in the latest test by, Bitdefender achieved 100 percent success protecting against Mac-specific malware.
Because it's possible for a Mac to act as a carrier for malware that attacks Windows, the researchers also check how well each antivirus detects Windows threats. Bitdefender also managed 100 percent in this test, and almost all products detected better than 90 percent. The one exception was Intego, whose 28 percent detection rate makes sense given that, unlike the rest, Intego has always focused on Mac protection, not Windows. Both AV-Comparatives and certify Bitdefender for Mac antivirus protection.
Bitdefender also achieved 100 percent protection in this lab's test, with no false positives. AV-Test's team also checked each antivirus against a collection of Mac-centered PUAs (Potentially Unwanted Applications) and against Windows malware. In both these tests, Bitdefender took the top score, greater than 99 percent. As with the Windows product, in other words, its lab scores are superb. Windows Malware Protection ESET, Intego, and a few others include the ability to automatically run scans on a predetermined schedule. Bitdefender omits this feature, because its real-time protection should catch any new malware before such a scheduled scan.
That does mean that it's important to run a full System Scan as soon as you've installed the product, to make sure your Mac is clean. A full scan with Bitdefender took 18 minutes, the same as Avira, and less than half the average time among current Mac products. Running a quick scan, which looks for active malware and checks system areas typically used by malware, took just one minute. That's fast, but Norton's quick scan took just 30 seconds, and finished in 15 seconds.
All the products I've reviewed recently promise that they'll too, so your Mac doesn't become a Typhoid Mary. When I opened a folder containing my Windows malware samples, Bitdefender didn't react immediately, so I scanned the folder.
It detected and quarantined quite a few, but reported itself unable to quarantine a handful. After I used Finder to delete that last handful, I found that Bitdefender wiped out 75 percent of the Windows samples. That's pretty good, but Webroot eliminated 86 percent of them, and Sophos got them all.
Superb Phishing Protection On a Windows system, Bitdefender blocks access to fraudulent and malicious websites at the network level. No internet-aware program, browser or otherwise, can access a site that Bitdefender has flagged as dangerous. The macOS version functions as a browser extension in Chrome and Firefox, and my testing shows that it does a very good job. Sites that host malware tend to be locked to a specific operating system—most often Windows. Phishing sites, though, are totally inclusive.
No matter how you're browsing the web, whether from a laptop, a game console, or a smart refrigerator, if a phishing site tricks you into giving away your security credentials, you're hosed. To test how well an antivirus utility protects against phishing, I start by collecting the newest phishing URLs I can find on the web, looking in particular for ones that haven't made it onto blacklists. I use a hand-coded test utility to simultaneously launch each URL in four browsers, one protected by Norton and one apiece by the antiphishing protection built into Chrome, Firefox, and Internet Explorer. As for the Mac products, well, my utility works only in Windows, so on the Mac my testing involves a lot of fancy cut-and-paste into the browser's Address bar. The fraudsters are constantly trying new tricks to get past phishing protection; some days they do better than others.
As a consequence, I report results as the difference between the product under testing and the other browsers, rather than as a hard number. In my Windows testing, I find that hardly any products do better than Norton, and the same proved true on the Mac. Bitdefender was the only product that outscored Norton, with a detection rate 5 percent higher. It also handily beat the three browsers. Here's something interesting, though.
I tested protection by Bitdefender's Windows antivirus simultaneously, and it fared even better, beating Norton's detection rate by a full 12 percent. That's the best score ever in this test.
You'll also notice in the chart that scored distinctly lower than its Windows counterpart. TrafficLight for Search Result Protection If you try to navigate to a fake or dangerous site, Bitdefender's TrafficLight browser extension steers you back to safety. TrafficLight also marks up search results, using green and red icons to identify safe and dangerous links. If you stay away from red-light links, you should be safe.
Clicking the red icon opens a page with detailed information about why the link is dangerous. You get a laundry list of reasons, with relevant icons highlighted. In most cases it's phishing or malware. But other reasons include Facebook scams, sending unsolicited email, and piracy. One warning; at the moment, TrafficLight doesn't work correctly with the specific combination of Google on Safari.
It works with Google in other browsers, however, and with other search engines in Safari, however. Ransomware Protection Keeps Files Safe.
Ransomware is a growing threat, and is showing up in more and more security products. Some add a monitoring layer that looks for behavior that suggests encrypting ransomware.
Others, Bitdefender included, balk ransomware activity by limiting access to the folders typically affected by ransomware. A ransomware attack doesn't aim to disable your computer. The perpetrators know you'll need a working computer in order to pay up. Ransomware usually attacks documents, images, and other personal files, working in the background until its dirty deeds are done. Bitdefender's Safe Files feature defaults to protecting your Desktop, Documents, Downloads, and Pictures folder; you can add any other folders in which you routinely keep important documents. Known and trusted applications can access your files just as they always would, but when an unknown program attempts to create or modify files in a protected folder, Safe Files prevents the change and pops up a warning.
If you recognize the program, if it's something you're actively using, you can add it to the trusted list. If not, let Bitdefender keep blocking the attack. Under Windows I had no trouble seeing this feature in action. I used a couple of programs guaranteed to be unknown, a simple fake encryptor and a tiny editor that I wrote myself. I don't have anything similar for the Mac in my bag of tricks, but I have no doubt the feature works in just the same way. Savvy Mac users know that Time Machine keeps regular backups, theoretically insulating them against ransomware.
Got your files encrypted? Just restore from backup! But since the Time Machine backup drive is often left connected to the Mac, there's a possibility that backups could be compromised by a ransomware attack. Just as it prevents unauthorized access to your documents, Bitdefender also protects your Time Machine files.
A Fine Choice Bitdefender has long been a name to conjure with in the world of Windows security software, and Bitdefender Antivirus for Mac carries on that tradition. Two labs certified its protection with their very best scores. In my own hands-on test of antiphishing prowess, it beat all other Mac-based contenders. And it even protects your files and backups against ransomware. It doesn't have the posse of security bonus features found in its Windows equivalent, but that's not anything to worry about. Bitdefender is an Editors' Choice for Mac antivirus. With scores nearly as good as Bitdefender's and even more features, Kaspersky Internet Security for Mac is also an Editors' Choice.
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First of all, here is some information about my laptop. Macbook Air 2013 - running macOS Sierra Version 10.12.3 These are the multiple methods I have tried to get rid of this app. 1) Force quit the app through Activity Monitor Both 'Quit' and 'ForceQuit' does not work.
No matter how long I wait or how many times I press those two buttons, nothing happens. 2) Delete the app files The folder is located in Macintosh HD/Library/Bitdefender Because this was located in the system folder(?) I kept getting a popup saying I didn't have permission.
3) Disable system integrity protection I had to disable system integrity protection. I booted the computer into recovery mode(CMD+R) and used terminal to type 'csrutility disable'. ( Somewhere along this process I fiddled with terminal a bit and ended up with terminal constantly being in bash mode and commanding to 'exit' only closes the current window, doesn't change the shell to it's previous state - i don't even know what I've done.) After rebooting my laptop after disabling system integrity protection, I have tried steps 1&2. Neither has worked. 4) Use a 3rd party app cleaner I have tried using 'Appcleaner' & 'Cleanmymac 3'. Both apps fail to identify the 'Antivirus for mac' in the first place (It doesn't show up in the list of apps I can uninstall).
PLEASE somebody help me uninstall this godforsaken app. It was a mistake to install this app for a free trial. Also this same problem happens with IPVanish - another app which I can't seem to delete, it's like a ghost lingering in my files. I know I can clean my laptop and just restore from a backup - I don't want to because it is a massive hassle and I will only go with this method if there is no other way. Edit: I have managed to delete the app thanks to. Following the instructions in the link above helped greatly! Second 's suggestion, also go to page that gives the manual removal and check the folder paths listed.
When programs are persistent, it's usually as they've put daemons or launch agents into the system. Run the malwarebytes, then look at the list I linked to and go through those folders and just look, so you can see the logic of how these programs work - you may find some more of the IPVanish files as well - check for the manufacturer's name in the files. I have found that once you get the hang of finding where these pest-ware programs land, it becomes super easy to get rid of them afterwards.