
#Microsoft money 2005 reviews software
Instead, Microsoft is likely to begin selling a stand-alone product.īut will consumers pony up to buy anti-virus software from the same company whose own operating system is so vulnerable to security lapses in the first place? Microsoft has made rumblings before about getting into the security software market but it hasn't had a major impact on the top three anti-virus firms.įor one, given the company's myriad antitrust problems over the years, analysts highly doubt that Microsoft will bundle anti-virus software into Windows. In terms of information flow, this is not news," said Rob Owens, an analyst with Pacific Crest Securities.ĭespite its formidable financial resources and marketing heft, Microsoft faces a lot of challenges in the security software market. "It's been no secret that Microsoft wants to get into security.

So Thursday's announcement shouldn't come as a surprise to investors. In fact, Microsoft began offering some virus removal tools based on GeCad's software last January.įears heightened a few weeks ago when Mister Softee announced it was buying anti-spyware firm Giant Company. Microsoft first dipped its toe in the anti-virus market in the summer of 2003 when it purchased the assets of Romanian security software firm GeCad.

Concerns about increasing competition aren't new. It appears that investors may have overreacted. Do investors in these companies really need to be afraid of Microsoft ( Research) "Netscaping" them? That term refers to how Microsoft made erstwhile browser king Netscape largely irrelevant once Microsoft began bundling Internet Explorer into Windows? ( Time Warner ( Research), the owner of CNN/Money, also owns Netscape.)
