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Symantec readies Norton security, storage apps for Android, iPhone smartphones

Also, Norton DNS service will flag or block dangerous Web content

By Ellen Messmer, Network World
May 27, 2010 12:03 AM ET
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Symantec's Norton division today launched its "Norton Everywhere" initiative aimed at bringing security protections and cloud-storage access to the Google Android and Apple iPhone smartphones. The announcement coincides with the launch of a new mobile-focused Web site, www.norton.com.

Norton pledges smartphone support

First up is a free app for Android and iPhone, called Norton Connect, that will enable access to data stored in Symantec's cloud-based storage service for those subscribing to a service such as Norton 360. PC-based access to cloud storage is more typical today, but Norton Connect extends access to subscribers with Android and iPhone devices, says Dan Nadir, senior director for product management at Norton.

The Norton Connect apps are expected to be available in June from the iPhone and Android apps stores. The Android version will also be available directly from Symantec.

Also due in June is data-protection and management software for Android called Norton Smartphone Security for Android 1.0. This software, Norton's first subscription-based security software for Android, will let users remotely disable a phone if it's stolen or lost.

"You can send a text message to your phone and wipe all the data from your phone and lock it," Nadir says. "We include a tutorial that walks you through and lets you try it in test mode."

The Smartphone Security for Android software also will watch for known malware, though there's not much of it for Android today, Nadir acknowledges. Norton designed the security-protection software to watch the apps you're running on Android, and it will "flag apps behaving in suspicious ways, such as sending personal data out," Nadir says.

As reports of any sneaky apps come in, Norton will keep track of them. "We identify the app and if it's bad for some reason, we add it to a black list," Nadir says.

The software also has a call-blocking mechanism and a way to tell who's calling you. Another feature Norton is calling "roaming protection" will notify you if you're in a different roaming area, where additional charges are likely to apply.

"This will work for both data and voice charges," says Nadir, noting people sometimes forget that data charges, as well as voice charges, increase when you're roaming.

DNS security service on tap

In addition to its Android security software push, Norton is rolling out entirely new service-based security software — offered for free -- aimed at protecting a wide range of mobile smartphones, PCs and Macs.

It works when users of computer devices choose to access the Internet by the service Symantec is calling Norton DNS. DNS refers to the phrase Domain Name System, which describes the address and naming conventions underpinning the Internet today.

The Norton DNS service will flag or even block dangerous content or Web sites. If you're on an iPad and you think e-mail is from your bank but it's a phishing page, the service will block it, Nadir says. Symantec's Norton division partnered with New Hampshire-based Dyn, which operates a global DNS network, to integrate security-scanning protections into Norton DNS. It works in the background without need for any software on the user's device.

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