Smartphone Antivirus Apps

4
Programs

Showing 1–4 of 4

Microsoft Family Safety

Microsoft Family Safety v2023

160.3 MB · Free · 10,674 downloads
Microsoft Family Safety is a freeware providing parental restriction to kids. It helps parents set boundaries for their…
4.5 2
Get
DuckDuckGo

DuckDuckGo v1018

50.9 MB · Free · 5,725 downloads
DuckDuckGo app lets you browse privately, block trackers, and erase your data with one tap. It gives you…
5.0 2
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LastPass

LastPass App v4.139.0

50.1 MB · Free · 5,008 downloads
LastPass securely stores passwords, cards, notes with AES-256 encryption, two-factor authentication, and device syncing.
5.0 1
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1Password

1Password v2024

157 MB · Free · downloads
1Password is a password management app that offers secure storage for passwords and personal data, with easy synchronization…
4.6 23
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About Antivirus

Antivirus software has changed shape over the past decade. Signature scanning — matching files against a list of known threats — is now only one layer. Behavioral monitoring, cloud lookups, and reputation scoring do much of the real detection, which is why most products need an internet connection to perform at their best.

For Windows users, the starting point is the protection already built into the system. It is competent, and a third-party product should earn its place by adding something: a better firewall, ransomware folder shielding, a password manager, or simply an interface you prefer. Free editions from the major vendors are capable; the paid tiers mostly add convenience features and support rather than fundamentally stronger detection.

A few honest cautions belong here. No scanner catches everything, and a green checkmark can encourage risky habits. Antivirus is one layer alongside updates, careful downloading, and backups. Some free products also fund themselves through bundled extras or data collection, so the installation screens deserve attention rather than a quick click-through.

This category is large, and it includes both current names and older releases kept for reference. When you choose, weigh system impact as much as detection scores — a scanner that slows boot time noticeably tends to get switched off, and a disabled scanner protects nothing at all. Check the version date on any listing before installing it.