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Developer(s) | McAfee |
---|---|
Initial release | April 2006 |
Operating system | Cross-platform |
Website | siteadvisor.com archive |
The McAfee SiteAdvisor, later renamed as the McAfee WebAdvisor, is a service that reports on the safety of web sites by crawling the web and testing the sites it finds for malware and spam. A browser extension can show these ratings on hyperlinks such as on web search results.[1][2] Users could formerly submit reviews of sites.[3]
The service was originally developed by SiteAdvisor, Inc, an MIT startup[4] first introduced at CodeCon on February 10, 2006,[5] and later acquired by McAfee[6] on April 5, 2006. Since its founding, it has received criticism for its improper rating of some sites, and more importantly the length of time it takes to resolve complaints.
Prior to mid-October 2014, the functionality of SiteAdvisor could be accessed by submitting a URL to the website at https://www.siteadvisor.com/sites/, but can now also be accessed through a downloadable Browser Plugin.[7][citation needed]
Sites are rated in levels of Safe (green tick), Suspicious (yellow exclamation mark) and Unsafe (red "X").
Additional features include:
A paid version of McAfee SiteAdvisor, McAfee SiteAdvisor LIVE, is included in McAfee Total Protection and has extra features:
In addition to selling to the end consumers, in 2017, McAfee also sold their McAfee Secure program to the web site owners, which supposedly runs daily security checks and gives passing sites a "McAfee Secure" badge.[8]Now as in 2024 McAfee Secure program is called TrustedSite Certification.[9]
As of December 2010, McAfee Secure marketing materials say there are 350 million installs of McAfee SiteAdvisor, and a likely much larger viewer base with search engine agreements such as that with Yahoo.
A URL shortening service which advertised itself as "secure" was operated until mid-2018. Its defining feature was that it would deny redirecting to sites classified by SiteAdvisor as insecure, to provide users receiving a "mcaf.ee" URL with the confidence that they would not land on a malicious site.[10]
In March 2006, McAfee launched a JavaScript-based quiz which has users pick between sites rated as safe and unsafe.[11]
A flash-based memory training game called "WebQuest" was launched around 2007.[12]
SiteAdvisor has published various reports regarding online threats such as typosquatting, where mistyped domains may lead to sites ranging from harmless pay-per-click and domain parking sites to pornographic and malware sites.[13]
The very nature of SiteAdvisor and the long periods between site crawls mean that even if the SiteAdvisor tests were 100% accurate a Green rating offers no guarantee of safety. Malicious code and browser exploits often spread fast over large numbers of websites,[14] meaning a Green rating may not be up to date and may provide a false sense of security.
McAfee SiteAdvisor now makes use of the TrustedSource website reputation organisation, to act as something like a 'cloud' intelligence software to get the most up-to-date information on websites as possible, very similar to McAfee's Active Protection (Artemis) system.[citation needed] The details of this system are not known.
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