1971–1980 period (pre-antivirus days) The first known computer virus appeared in 1971 and was dubbed the "
Creeper virus". This computer virus infected
Digital Equipment Corporation's (
DEC)
PDP-10 mainframe computers running the
TENEX operating system. The Creeper virus was eventually deleted by a program created by
Ray Tomlinson and known as "
The Reaper". Some people consider "The Reaper" the first antivirus software ever written – it may be the case, but it is important to note that the Reaper was actually a virus itself specifically designed to remove the Creeper virus. The Creeper virus was followed by several other viruses. The first known that appeared "in the wild" was "
Elk Cloner", in 1981, which infected
Apple II computers. In 1983, the term
"computer virus" was coined by
Fred Cohen in one of the first ever published academic papers on
computer viruses. Cohen used the term
"computer virus" to describe programs that:
"affect other computer programs by modifying them in such a way as to include a (possibly evolved) copy of itself." (note that a more recent definition of
computer virus has been given by the Hungarian security researcher
Péter Szőr:
"a code that recursively replicates a possibly evolved copy of itself"). The first
IBM PC compatible "in the wild" computer virus, and one of the first real widespread infections, was "
Brain" in 1986. From then, the number of viruses has grown exponentially. Most of the computer viruses written in the early and mid-1980s were limited to self-reproduction and had no specific damage routine built into the code. That changed when more and more programmers became acquainted with computer virus programming and created viruses that manipulated or even destroyed data on infected computers. Before
internet connectivity was widespread, computer viruses were typically spread by infected
floppy disks. Antivirus software came into use, but was updated relatively infrequently. During this time, virus checkers essentially had to check executable files and the boot sectors of floppy disks and hard disks. However, as internet usage became common, viruses began to spread online.
1980–1990 period (early days) There are competing claims for the innovator of the first antivirus product. Possibly, the first publicly documented removal of an "in the wild" computer virus (the "Vienna virus") was performed by
Bernd Fix in 1987. In 1985, in United Kingdom, Jan Hruska and Peter Lammer founded the security firm
Sophos and began producing their first antivirus and encryption products. In the same period, in Hungary,
VirusBuster was founded (and subsequently incorporated by
Sophos). In 1987, Andreas Lüning and Kai Figge, who founded
G Data Software in 1985, released their first antivirus product for the
Atari ST platform. In 1987, the
Ultimate Virus Killer (UVK) was also released. This was the de facto industry standard virus killer for the
Atari ST and
Atari Falcon, the last version of which (version 9.0) was released in April 2004. In 1987, in the United States,
John McAfee founded the
McAfee company and, at the end of that year, he released the first version of
VirusScan. Also in 1987 (in
Czechoslovakia), Peter Paško,
Rudolf Hrubý, and Miroslav Trnka created the first version of
NOD antivirus. In 1987, Fred Cohen wrote that
there is no algorithm that can perfectly detect all possible computer viruses. Finally, at the end of 1987, the first two
heuristic antivirus utilities were released:
Flushot Plus by
Ross Greenberg and
Anti4us by Erwin Lanting. In his
O'Reilly book,
Malicious Mobile Code: Virus Protection for Windows, Roger Grimes described Flushot Plus as "the first holistic program to fight malicious mobile code (MMC)." However, the kind of heuristic used by early AV engines was totally different from those used today. The first product with a heuristic engine resembling modern ones was
F-PROT in 1991. Early heuristic engines were based on dividing the binary into different sections: data section, code section (in a legitimate binary, it usually starts always from the same location). Indeed, the initial viruses re-organized the layout of the sections, or overrode the initial portion of a section in order to jump to the very end of the file where malicious code was located—only going back to resume execution of the original code. This was a very specific pattern, not used at the time by any legitimate software, which represented an elegant heuristic to catch suspicious code. Other kinds of more advanced heuristics were later added, such as suspicious section names, incorrect header size, regular expressions, and partial pattern in-memory matching. In 1988, the growth of antivirus companies continued. In Germany, Tjark Auerbach founded
Avira (
H+BEDV at the time) and released the first version of
AntiVir (named
"Luke Filewalker" at the time). In Spain, Carlos Jiménez released the first version of his antivirus (he founded Anyware Seguridad Informática, now part of McAfee, one year later). In
Bulgaria, Vesselin Bontchev released his first freeware antivirus program (he later joined
FRISK Software). Also Frans Veldman released the first version of
ThunderByte Antivirus, also known as
TBAV (he sold his company to
Norman Safeground in 1998). In
Czechoslovakia,
Pavel Baudiš and Eduard Kučera founded
Avast Software (at the time
ALWIL Software) and released their first version of avast! antivirus. In June 1988, in
South Korea,
Ahn Cheol-Soo released its first antivirus software, called
V1 (he founded AhnLab later in 1995). Finally, in autumn 1988, in the United Kingdom, Alan Solomon founded S&S International and created his ''
Dr. Solomon's Anti-Virus Toolkit'' (although he launched it commercially only in 1991 – in 1998 Solomon's company was acquired by
McAfee, then known as Network Associates Inc.). Also in 1988, a mailing list named VIRUS-L was started on the
BITNET/
EARN network where new viruses and the possibilities of detecting and eliminating viruses were discussed. Some members of this mailing list were: Alan Solomon,
Eugene Kaspersky (
Kaspersky Lab),
Friðrik Skúlason (
FRISK Software),
John McAfee (
McAfee), Luis Corrons (
Panda Security),
Mikko Hyppönen (
F-Secure),
Péter Szőr, Tjark Auerbach (
Avira) and Vesselin Bontchev (
FRISK Software). SAM 2.0, released March 1990, incorporated technology allowing users to easily update SAM to intercept and eliminate new viruses, including many that didn't exist at the time of the program's release.
1990–2000 period (emergence of the antivirus industry) In 1990, in Spain, Mikel Urizarbarrena founded
Panda Security (
Panda Software at the time). In Hungary, the security researcher
Péter Szőr released the first version of
Pasteur antivirus. In 1990, the
Computer Antivirus Research Organization (
CARO) was founded. In 1991, CARO released the
"Virus Naming Scheme", originally written by
Friðrik Skúlason and Vesselin Bontchev. Although this naming scheme is now outdated, it remains the only existing standard that most computer security companies and researchers ever attempted to adopt.
CARO members includes: Alan Solomon, Costin Raiu, Dmitry Gryaznov,
Eugene Kaspersky,
Friðrik Skúlason,
Igor Muttik,
Mikko Hyppönen, Morton Swimmer, Nick FitzGerald,
Padgett Peterson, Peter Ferrie, Righard Zwienenberg and Vesselin Bontchev. In 1991, in the United States,
Symantec released the first version of
Norton AntiVirus. In the same year, in the
Czech Republic, Jan Gritzbach and Tomáš Hofer founded
AVG Technologies (
Grisoft at the time) while, in
Italy, Gianfranco Tonello founded
TG Soft, although both companies released the first version of their anti-virus products (
Anti-Virus Guard (AVG) and
VirIT eXplorer) only in 1992-1993. On the other hand, in
Finland,
F-Secure (founded in 1988 by Petri Allas and Risto Siilasmaa – with the name of Data Fellows) released the first version of their antivirus product.
F-Secure claims to be the first antivirus firm to establish a presence on the World Wide Web. In 1991, the
European Institute for Computer Antivirus Research (EICAR) was founded to further antivirus research and improve development of antivirus software. In 1992, in Russia, Igor Danilov released the first version of
SpiderWeb, which later became
Dr.Web. In 1994,
AV-TEST reported that there were 28,613 unique malware samples (based on MD5) in their database. Over time other companies were founded. In 1996, in
Romania,
Bitdefender was founded and released the first version of
Anti-Virus eXpert (AVX). In 1997, in Russia,
Eugene Kaspersky and
Natalya Kaspersky co-founded security firm
Kaspersky Lab. In 1996, there was also the first "in the wild"
Linux virus, known as
"Staog". In 1999,
AV-TEST reported that there were 98,428 unique malware samples (based on MD5) in their database. In 2001, Tomasz Kojm released the first version of
ClamAV, the first ever open source antivirus engine to be commercialised. In 2007,
ClamAV was bought by
Sourcefire, which in turn was acquired by
Cisco Systems in 2013. In 2002, in United Kingdom,
Morten Lund and Theis Søndergaard co-founded the antivirus firm BullGuard. In 2005,
AV-TEST reported that there were 333,425 unique malware samples (based on MD5) in their database. Over the years it has become necessary for antivirus software to use several different strategies (e.g. specific email and network protection or low level modules) and detection algorithms, as well as to check an increasing variety of files, rather than just executables, for several reasons: • Powerful
macros used in
word processor applications, such as
Microsoft Word, presented a risk. Virus writers could use the macros to write viruses embedded within documents. This meant that computers could now also be at risk from infection by opening documents with hidden attached macros. • The possibility of embedding executable objects inside otherwise non-executable file formats can make opening those files a risk. • Later email programs, in particular Microsoft's
Outlook Express and
Outlook, were
vulnerable to viruses embedded in the email body itself. A user's computer could be infected by just opening or previewing a message. In 2005,
F-Secure was the first security firm that developed an Anti-Rootkit technology, called
BlackLight. Because most users are usually connected to the Internet on a continual basis,
Jon Oberheide first proposed a
Cloud-based antivirus design in 2008. In February 2008 McAfee Labs added the industry-first cloud-based anti-malware functionality to VirusScan under the name Artemis. It was tested by
AV-Comparatives in February 2008 and officially unveiled in August 2008 in
McAfee VirusScan. Cloud AV created problems for comparative testing of security software – part of the AV definitions was out of testers control (on constantly updated AV company servers) thus making results non-repeatable. As a result,
Anti-Malware Testing Standards Organisation (AMTSO) started working on method of testing cloud products which was adopted on May 7, 2009. In 2011,
AVG introduced a similar cloud service, called Protective Cloud Technology.
2014–present: rise of next-gen, market consolidation Following the 2013 release of the APT 1 report from
Mandiant, the industry has seen a shift towards signature-less approaches to the problem capable of detecting and mitigating
zero-day attacks. Numerous approaches to address these new forms of threats have appeared, including behavioral detection, artificial intelligence, machine learning, and cloud-based file detection. According to Gartner, it is expected the rise of new entrants, such
Carbon Black,
Cylance and
Crowdstrike will force end point protection incumbents into a new phase of innovation and acquisition. One method from
Bromium involves micro-virtualization to protect desktops from malicious code execution initiated by the end user. Another approach from
SentinelOne and
Carbon Black focuses on behavioral detection by building a full context around every process execution path in real time, while
Cylance leverages an artificial intelligence model based on machine learning. Increasingly, these signature-less approaches have been defined by the media and analyst firms as "next-generation" antivirus and are seeing rapid market adoption as certified antivirus replacement technologies by firms such as Coalfire and DirectDefense. In response, traditional antivirus vendors such as
Trend Micro,
Symantec and
Sophos have responded by incorporating "next-gen" offerings into their portfolios as analyst firms such as
Forrester and
Gartner have called traditional signature-based antivirus "ineffective" and "outdated". As of
Windows 8, Windows includes its own free antivirus protection under the
Windows Defender brand. Despite bad detection scores in its early days, AV-Test now certifies Defender as one of its top products. While it isn't publicly known how the inclusion of antivirus software in Windows affected antivirus sales, Google search traffic for antivirus has declined significantly since 2010. In 2014,
Intel bought McAfee. Since 2016, there has been a notable amount of consolidation in the industry.
Avast purchased
AVG in 2016 for $1.3 billion.
Avira was acquired by
Norton owner
Gen Digital (then NortonLifeLock) in 2020 for $360 million. In 2021, the
Avira division of
Gen Digital acquired BullGuard. The BullGuard brand was discontinued in 2022 and its customers were migrated to Norton. In 2022, Gen Digital acquired Avast, effectively consolidating four major antivirus brands under one owner. In September 2024, following the
US Commerce Department's ban on
Kaspersky, Pango Group acquired its customers (about 1 million). The customers received continued services with no action required on their part. Then, in December 2024, Pango Group merged with Total Security, the provider of Total AV antivirus. The combined entity, now called Point Wild, has an enterprise value of $1.7 billion. As of 2024, more than half of Americans use built-in antivirus protection for their devices like
Microsoft Defender or
XProtect from
Apple. However, about 121 million adults still use third-party antivirus software. Half of these adults use paid products, and about 50% of third-party software users - the owners of personal computers and
Windows operating systems. Antivirus programs on mobile devices are used by 17% of adults. The 2025 antivirus market report confirms that most third-party antivirus users are on desktop devices, primarily aged between 35 and 45. In contrast, younger users (18–25) tend to rely on
ad blockers instead. In the U.S., on average, 75–85% of people use antivirus software or some other form of protection on at least one device. Antivirus software for computers and
mobile devices is predominantly used by residents of large cities. Mobile device users more often rely on
password managers rather than antivirus software for digital security. Moreover, the majority of password‑manager users live in medium‑sized and small towns. == Identification methods ==