IObit

IObit
Industry Computer software
Products Advanced SystemCare
Driver Booster
SmartDefrag
IObit Malware Fighter
MacBooster
Advanced Mobile Care
Services Developing system tune-up and security software for Microsoft Windows, Mac OS X, iOS and Android operating systems.
Website www.iobit.com

IObit Pty, Ltd. is a China-based software company that develops and publishes system utilities and security software.[1] It has multi-platform projects for Microsoft Windows, Mac OS X, Android and iOS operating systems with products including Advanced SystemCare, Driver Booster, IObit Malware Fighter, MacBooster and Advanced Mobile Care.

History

Founded in 2004, the company originally introduced Advanced SystemCare. After 2007, the company started to expand its product line. New products included SmartDefrag in 2008 and Game Booster in 2009. Since 2011 IObit added system utilities for Microsoft Windows, Mac OS X, Android and iOS operating systems. In 2012 it launched Advanced System Care Ultimate 6 and Advanced Mobile Care for Android, and, in 2013, Driver Booster, IObit Uninstaller, and Mac Booster.

Malwarebytes conflict

On 2 November 2009 in a Malwarebytes Forum post, a Malwarebytes employee accused IObit of incorporating the Malwarebytes anti-malware databases into their own anti-malware programs, MalwareFighter and Iobit Security 360. Suspicion was triggered when employees at Malwarebytes came across an IObit forum post regarding a Malwarebytes key generator that IObit MalwareFighter had detected which was flagged using a name format similar to Malwarebytes'. Malwarebytes added a harmless file to their database which, although not malicious, was detected and reported as a threat by IObit's software under a similar name. Malwarebytes VP of Development, Doug Swanson, later verified the claim made by the Malwarebytes Forum post.

After several claims of Malwarebytes through its official forum, on November 3, 2009, IObit made a formal declaration in an IObit forum post stating the issue as Malwarebytes' "malicious rumors for hyping itself". The company said it had adopted an open sample analyzing system with a submission page where any enthusiastic user could submit suspicious samples missed by its programs but detected by other anti-malware products. And due to the flaws of such data collecting method, the submission page of http://db.iobit.com/deal/sdsubmit/index.php has been disabled by IObit. Reference from IObit Forum post.[2] Other notable references are The Malwarebytes Forum,[3] ComputerWorld,[4] Softpedia,[5] CNet,[6] and The Bleeping Computer.[7]

References

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