Google made a significant addition to its security lineup Friday with
its acquisition of online malware scanning service VirusTotal. Experts
say the malware intelligence Google will have at its disposal would
enhance not only existing products and services, but will backbone site
safety rankings.
Terms of the deal were undisclosed.
VirusTotal's
service allows users to upload files or URLs that are scanned for
malware. The five-year-old company uses more than 40 antimalware engines
on the back end to perform scans. VirusTotal shares data with affected
security companies as well in order to enhance scanning capabilities on
both sides.
"Given Google's visibility to everything, having a
service like this lets them see and possibly interpret malware long
before they might have recognized it themselves," said IANS CTO Dave
Shackleford. "With their efforts to notify Google users of nation state
attacks and other security events, this adds some serious heft to their
response and notification efforts."
Google, a VirusTotal partner
before today, already flags suspicious sites and files in its search
queries. It also offers the Safe Browsing Diagnostic tool which scans
websites and returns data as to the safety of the page, including
current status, whether a site is hosting or distributin malware and
whether it has done so in the past.
“Security is incredibly
important to our users and we’ve invested many millions of dollars to
help keep them safe online," a Google spokesperson said in a statement.
"VirusTotal also has a strong track record in Web security, and we’re
delighted to be able to provide them with the infrastructure they need
to ensure that their service continues to improve.”
A post on the VirusTotal site welcomed the acquisition and said the company will continue to operate independently and maintain existing partnerships with other security companies.
"This
is great news for you, and bad news for malware generators, because the
quality and power of our malware research tools will keep improving,
most likely faster; and Google’s infrastructure will ensure that our
tools are always ready, right when you need them," the post said. "This
is an exciting step forward. Google has a long track record working to
keep people safe online and we look forward to fighting the good fight
together with them."
Google has made several high-profile security
acquisitions since picking up sandboxing specialist GreenBorder and
messaging security service provider Postini in 2007. Two years later,
Google added reCAPTCHA as a CAPTCHA technology for its services. Last
year, it scooped up Zynamics, a vulnerability research company that
specializes in reverse engineering software.
Courtesy by Micharl Mimoso
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