![]() When you’ve not got the main app open, Avira sits in the background. It’s a great prompt to update your passwords if – when – you find you’ve been included in a leak. This is Avira’s dark web checking service, which compares your email address against known data breaches circulating on the bits of the internet we don’t usually go to. The Android app is also the home of identity safeguard, which we couldn’t find in the main desktop app. The iOS app is a bit thinner in terms of features, due to the more tightly locked-down nature of Apple’s mobile OS, which tends to block anti-malware measures as neatly as it does malware itself. ![]() The Android app mainly comprises a virus scanner, plus the VPN and password manager, though there’s a handy call blocker too, and scanners to see if any apps have helped themselves to permissions they shouldn’t have, and to check for security holes in your network connections. A prime subscription allows you to install Avira on up to five devices, so installing the mobile version should be the next thing you do, as we all rely on our mobile devices, and the incidence of malware on mobile is increasing. That’s a shame, because it feels less complete without them. Family lifeĮven in its prime bundle, Avira antivirus doesn’t offer parental controls. There’s a firewall that plugs into the main Windows defender firewall – changing its settings beyond on/off takes you to Windows defender – and the browser plugins take care of things like tracking cookies. Some of the options, however, could potentially have an unwanted effect on the general running of your computer, so apply them with care. There are a lot of options here, and it’s possible to plug every hole and seal Windows up tight. There’s a file shredder that overwrites deleted files for secure removal, the VPN for private online browsing, and part of the main app that updates your operating system settings to be more privacy-focused. Avira Prime, £107.88, 5 devicesĪvira prime offers plenty of tools to protect your data. Subscription: Antivirus pro, £35.88 per year for 1 device. A 60-day test of Avira prime is available if you decline to sign up for a subscription, though you’ll need to input a credit card number or PayPal account to get it. ![]() This is, we discovered, the only way to get a free trial of Avira. If you want your apps updated, or any of the other services chosen to live behind the subscription, you’ll need to pay up. It will happily scan your PC and report back on what’s wrong with it, including outdated apps, tracking cookies, and unwanted files taking up space. However, the reason they give it away becomes clear when you actually try to use it. It installs plugins on your browser (Chrome, Opera, Edge and Firefox) to cover your online shopping trips, and generally feels like something they’d be mad to give away for free. There’s a software updater and PC cleaner. It offers real time protection as well as hard drive scanning, you get a 500MB/month bite of the VPN, identity protection, some PC tuning tools, a firewall, and protection from phishing attacks. However, that free version we mentioned earlier is actually very good. The VPN, password manager, software updater and PC tuneup tools can all be subscribed to separately. At the top is Avira prime, which costs a lot but can be installed on five different devices, and adds PC tuning tools and an unlimited VPN to the Internet security features. The next tier is Avira internet security, which costs more and includes everything from antivirus pro plus a software updater and password manager.
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