Antivirus, Anti-Malware, Anti-PUP? What is Emsisoft really?

  • March 25, 2015
  • 4 min read


A commentary from our CEO Christian Mairoll:

When I founded the company in 2003 I was able to say: Emsisoft is an “Anti-Trojan” company, or at least an “Anti-Spyware” company, as that was the more common term back then for all programs that were not specifically “Antivirus“. Over the years though, my team and I found that this definition was probably too narrow. In 2008 we decided to add a second scanning engine to our own technology, whereby the worldwide recognized definition of a typical antivirus product was met by our flagship product.

But honestly, it felt wrong using the word “Antivirus“. Our recorded statistics of the actual threat findings clearly indicated that viruses made up less than 5% of the total infections in 2008. So we started to think about ourselves more as being an “Anti-Malware” company and even named our flagship product accordingly “Emsisoft Anti-Malware“, since Malware is the official term that covers all types of threats for your computer. Interestingly, most of our competitors still use “Antivirus” for their products, despite the fact that this is basically wrong. Even the well known Internet security testing agency AV-Comparatives recognizes that.

Emsisoft Anti-PUP?

The term “PUP” stands for “Potentially Unwanted Program“. To be more precise: it stands for all those incredibly helpful browser toolbars, that not only change your default search provider, but also kindly display flashing commercial popups, can track your surfing habits or sell your so called ‘anonymous’ user profile cookie to advertising networks who only want to track every move you make on the internet. [sarcasm-end]

During the last year or so, the threat landscape that our malware analysis experts face has shifted significantly. I was quite surprised when I checked the latest infection statistics recently and compared them against the last few years: it seems we have literally become an “Anti-PUP” company!


In this table you can see what percentage of malware infections consisted of PUPs. In 2012, PUPs made up only 25% of all malware infections, and you can clearly see how that percentage rapidly increased within a few years!

79% of all infections that Emsisoft removes are PUPs!

After I verified the database query on our database three times because I couldn’t believe the data, it became clear to me that we did not only remove the incredible total of 2,534,673 malware infections in January 2015 (+ those that were not reported back to us), but also that there is something very very wrong in the freeware software industry when 79% of all infections that we detect are PUPs nowadays.

150314_antipup_infectionstotal

Obviously, quite a lot of software makers became greedy enough to trade their users’ privacy, comfort and piece of mind for quick cash. In an earlier article we reported how these PUP-makers try to convince software vendors to fall for the money by offering up to $2 per installation. Here is the total malware breakdown:

150314_antipup_typesofinfections

When there is a nuisance, there is a solution too. We at Emsisoft have always kept high ethical standards. While many antivirus products today don’t detect most of the PUPs and in fact install PUPs themselves directly with their own products, Emsisoft has received quite a bit of recognition of doing a great job in removing them efficiently.

The real power of the second scan engine in Emsisoft products

Occasionally our customers ask us how much the second scanning engine of Emsisoft effectively contributes to the first one (Bitdefender). Well, today, the Emsisoft malware analysis team spends most of their time creating detection (and removal) signatures for these unwanted programs. As a result, more than 74% of the total detected PUPs are detected by our in-house built scan engine component, while the second scan engine focuses on detecting all other types of threats, like trojans, bots, backdoors, viruses, and others. The total distribution of findings across all types of malware is as follows:

150314_antipup_emsisoftengines

We should see ourselves mostly as an Anti-PUP company today

In conclusion, while the product name “Emsisoft Anti-Malware” remains valid, we should see ourselves mostly as an Anti-PUP company today. At the moment it is very unlikely that the trend of adding unwanted stuff for cash to freeware products will end soon. Unfortunately it has become a major business model to finance development of free software. So be careful when downloading stuff and follow some basic rules to avoid infections of PUPs. We will continue the fight against PUPs, their creators and those who spread them.

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Have a nice (PUP-free) day!

Emsi

Emsi

Emsisoft founder and managing director. In 1998 when I was 16, a so called 'friend' sent me a file via ICQ that unexpectedly opened my CD-ROM drive, which gave me a big scare. It marked the start of my journey to fight trojans and other malware. My story

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