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Thinking Outside The (Windows) Box, While many businesses depend on Microsoft and its various product suites, alternatives exist, some of which are not well known. Part four of this series examines free firewalls for Windows users.
Since the birth of the public internet, host firewalls have been sound practice. But high-speed broadband and wireless access have heightened risk and accelerated demand. Today, providers like AOL include host firewalls in client software bundles. Many large enterprises routinely install security suites containing firewalls on employee laptops. Last year, Microsoft even rolled a personal firewall into Windows XP SP2. Integrated firewalls like these are great for those who already useor have the budget to buythe associated commercial products. But some regional ISPs and small businesses prefer to recommend freely-available programs that are not tied to a specific OS patch or AV/VPN product. In this article, we take a brief look at five Windows firewalls that won't cost individuals a dime: Check Point ZoneAlarm, Comodo Personal Firewall, NetVeda Safety.Net, Primedius Firewall Lite, and Sunbelt Kerio Personal Firewall.
ZoneAlarm runs on Windows 98/ME/2000/XP, with 50 MB disk and 128 MB RAM (XP). For this review, we tried the free-for-individual-use version of ZoneAlarm (v6.1.737), a bi-directional desktop firewall that can enforce network and program rules. The commercial ZoneAlarm Pro ($49.95, not tested) adds anti-spyware, e-mail virus scanning, pop-up blocking, and automated firewall configuration features. After installation, ZoneAlarm uses a short wizard to create initial firewall rules. For example, if the user plans to surf the web, the wizard creates a rule that lets the default web browser (iexplore.exe) and a related OS program (svchost.exe) access the Internet. This learn-as-you-go approach makes ZoneAlarm seem awfully chattyperhaps even a bit intrusivefor the first day or two of use. But once rules are created, these alerts die down and you may even forget that the firewall is there until something unusual occurs. If these alerts bug you, a less-secure learning mode can be used to silently auto-create rules as new programs run. To prevent trusted programs from being abused (e.g., overwritten by trojans), it is recommended that users run in high security mode. Unfortunately, that mode is only available in the Pro version. Dig a little deeper, and you'll find that ZoneAlarm applies rules at two levels: firewall (network) and program (application). Program rules determine server (inbound) and access (outbound) permissions, depending upon whether a packet's origin/destination is located in the "trusted" or "Internet" zone. For example, the default web surfing rule gives IE "access" permission for both the trusted and Internet zones. If IE should load a web page with active content that unexpectedly opens a listening port, ZoneAlarm would ask whether IE should be given "server" permission as well. By default, all adapters are placed in the Internet zone, with security set to highthe host operates in "stealth" mode, ignoring all unsolicited inbound requests. Trusted zone security defaults to medium, permitting Windows file and printer sharing. Any zone's security can also be set to low, disabling the firewall for subnets and hosts in that zone. Zone rules can be fine-tuned to permit DNS/DHCP in high security mode, or block servers altogether. However, you won't find granular protocol/port-level control in the free version of ZoneAlarmfor example, you cannot allow inbound ICMP ping but not ICMP redirect. The free version of ZoneAlarm also alerts when AV stops running and can quarantine VB scripts received in e-mail. Many additional e-mail, privacy, and spyware defenses can be found in the Pro version, available by itself or in combination with sibling Anti-Spyware and Anti-Virus programs. Multi-user licenses are available in small business versions of ZoneAlarm. Zone Labs has been refining these firewalls for years, building a reputation in the market. The free ZoneAlarm is aimed at home users who really need GUI simplicity and alert advice. Users with more granular firewall requirements will need to spring for Pro or try another firewall.
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