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The changes are not ground-breaking, but do appear to be able to keep
Norton on top of its game. The Chrome support is a long-request feature for the world’s third-most popular browser, and extends
Norton Safe Web toolbar features such as search result evaluation, link scanning, and Norton’s ID Safe to Chrome users.
The two engine changes in the
Norton 2012 betas aren’t exposed in any new interface modules, yet they are important. Insight 3.0, and its component Download Insight 2.0 feature, have been improved. As mentioned above, Download Insight now looks at downloaded files for security and stability. It won’t stop you from downloading a file that’s known to cause instability, but it will warn you and provide an option to stop the download.
This is a fairly well-designed feature, and can tell the difference between operating systems. This means that if a file is known to be stable on Windows 7 but unstable on Windows XP, only Windows XP users will see the warning.
Norton Internet Security
2012 beta offers more nuanced download ratings, and will warn you when a download is known to cause system instability. (Credit: Screenshot by Seth Rosenblatt/CNET)
Meanwhile, improvements in SONAR 4.0 include upgraded behavioral protection, which monitors running programs for suspicious behavior and will stop them if it detects any. One of the bigger changes in SONAR is that it now scores DLL file separately, allowing for more nuanced detection.
There have been some interface tweaks in the betas, adding bright green to a formerly yellow-and-black interface. While not a major redesign, the green does serve to better highlight key features, such as your security status. Norton’s online storage vault also catches up to the competition this year, integrating a cloud sync feature, and the
Norton Power Eraser for last-ditch fixes has been integrated with the
Norton bootable recovery tool, so you won’t have to download them separately