Pros & Cons
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- Excellent scores in antivirus lab tests and our tests
- Full remote configuration management
- Can remotely trigger scan, update, reboot, more
- Includes firewall, VPN, file shredder
- Web control filters inappropriate content
- Exchange and SharePoint security for servers
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- Relatively expensive
- No VPN for Mac installations
Avast Premium Business Security Specs
| Behavior-Based Detection | |
| Device Control | |
| Firewall | |
| Malicious URL Blocking | |
| Number of Devices Supported | 999 |
| On-Access Malware Scan | |
| On-Demand Malware Scan | |
| Parental Control | |
| Phishing Protection | |
| Protection Type | Business security |
| Ransomware Protection | |
| Remote Control | |
| Remote Monitoring | |
| Supports macOS | |
| Supports Windows Server | |
| VPN | Full |
The security suite needs of a small business aren’t entirely different from what you get with a top-tier consumer-facing security suite. Many small business suites start with the features of the corresponding consumer product and add components specific to business use. Avast Premium Business Security takes a different approach. Its device-level protection (for Windows and macOS) adheres to basic protection, stripping out many features available to consumers. And its online Business Hub gives you, the business owner, much more remote control and insight than most competitors. Bitdefender Ultimate Small Business Security comes closest, offering options to remotely fix problems, launch scans, and check for updates. However, Avast provides full control over all settings. Accordingly, Avast and Bitdefender are our Editors' Choice winners for small business security.
How Much Does Avast Premium Business Security Cost?
You can purchase an Avast subscription for just about any small business style, from a single license for a sole proprietorship to a 999-license subscription for those optimists who believe a small business can be that big. Prices range from $49.81 for a single license to almost $23,000 for 999 licenses. AVG Internet Security Business Edition has a similar pricing system, ranging from $56.99 to over $23,000.
Realistically, most small business security suites support up to 20 or 25 users. For example, Malwarebytes for Teams and Norton Small Business Premium both have a limit of 20 users, with pricing of $799.99 per year for Malwarebytes and $399.99 per year for Norton. Yes, it looks like Malwarebytes costs twice as much as Norton’s price, but the difference is even greater, as Norton lets you protect two devices for each of those 20 employees. At the 20-license tier, Avast and AVG would cost $874.60 and $848.80, respectively.
A 25-pack for Bitdefender Ultimate Small Business Security costs $799.99 per year, but that’s for 25 employees. As with Norton, the Bitdefender subscription lets you install protection on twice as many devices as employees. In addition, you can install protection on up to five servers. ESET Small Business Security charges $512.50 per year for 25 licenses, on the low side. 25 licenses for Avast would run $1,093.25, just a bit more than AVG’s $1,061.
It’s clear that Avast and AVG cost roughly the same at all levels, and quite a bit more than the competition.
Getting Started With Avast Premium Business Security
As with most similar suites, your first step with Avast for business is to create an online account. Account creation involves several business-specific steps, including entering your business name. Next, you’ll install protection on your main PC or Mac.
(Credit: Avast/PCMag)Avast goes beyond simply downloading an installer at this point. You can choose which services to install (Antivirus, Web Control, VPN, and USB Protection) to start. You can also choose a group and a default profile for this device. I’ll discuss those options below. Briefly, choosing a policy pre-configures the installation with the configuration settings you’ve chosen.
(Credit: Avast/PCMag)With installation complete, your protection is active. If you’re familiar with Avast’s other products, you’ll find that this one looks quite different. There’s a left-rail menu with just three items: Status, Protection, and Privacy. The rest of the main window simply displays a status indicator and the text “This computer is protected.”
Antivirus Features Shared With Avast One Gold
With Bitdefender, Norton, and most competing products, the business suite contains all the components found in the company’s standalone antivirus and consumer-side security suite. Avast is quite different. The local app includes all the most important components of Avast’s consumer products, things like antivirus, firewall, and VPN. But it omits a substantial number of ancillary features found in Avast One Gold, which I’ll detail below.
Whether the audience is business or consumer, antivirus protection is the core of a suite. I always put security apps through hands-on testing, but I also carefully scan reports from five independent antivirus testing labs. Not all antivirus companies choose to participate with the labs, of course. With finite resources, the labs offer testing to the antivirus utilities they consider most important. An app that appears in reports from all five labs is clearly important; one that receives uniformly high scores is even better.
Like Norton, Avast features in the test results from all five labs. It earned perfect scores from AV-Comparatives, AVLab Cybersecurity Foundation, and SE Labs, and came up just short of perfect in reports from AV-Test Institute and MRG-Effitas. Each lab has its own way of reporting success, ranging from simple numbers or percentages to a collection of named certification levels. I’ve devised an algorithm that maps all the scores onto a 10-point scale and returns an aggregate lab score.
Avast’s five scores combine to make an aggregate score of 9.6, which is quite good and matches Norton’s score. The more labs involved, the more chance of a less-than-perfect score entering the mix, after all.
All but SE Labs included ESET in their latest reports, and all four awarded it a perfect score, resulting in 10 out of 10 possible points. Bitdefender, McAfee+, and Microsoft Defender Antivirus also turned up in the latest results from four labs, scoring 9.8, 9.8, and 8.8, respectively. With perfect scores from MRG-Effitas and AVLab, Malwarebytes boasts a 10-point aggregate score. AVG reached 10 points based on top scores from AV-Test and AV-Comparatives.
(Credit: Avast/PCMag)I also test each antivirus with a curated and analyzed collection of malware that I have compiled myself. Avast’s real-time protection kicks in just before a program launches, or just after it downloads. For testing, I simply downloaded my samples from online storage. Avast, AVG, and Norton all detected 97% of the samples and scored 9.7 of 10 possible points. Those identical scores are no coincidence; all three use the same antivirus engine, called the Gen stack.
To gain insight into how each antivirus protects against the latest malware, I begin with a feed of recently discovered malware-hosting URLs provided by testing lab MRG-Effitas. Out of approximately 100 verified samples, Avast blocked access to 32% and eliminated the malware payload for an additional 62%.
(Credit: Avast/PCMag)Avast’s total score of 94% is decent, but nearly half of the competing products achieved a higher score. Looking specifically at small business products, Norton topped the group with 99% protection, while Malwarebytes lagged significantly with 83%. AVG, Bitdefender, and ESET all came within a couple of percentage points of Avast.
(Credit: Avast/PCMag)In most cases, Avast displayed a pop-up notification that it prevented the connection, leaving the browser to display an error. In a few cases, Avast diverted the browser to a warning page explaining that it had restricted access to the page.
The same technology that detects dangerous websites also prevents users from accidentally visiting a phishing site. These fraudulent sites masquerade as secure websites, aiming to trick visitors into entering their username and password. If one of your employees falls for the trick, they may wind up turning over your company’s account to the fraudsters. In a business setting, you may be subject to targeted spear phishing attacks.
My phishing protection test uses hundreds of real-world phishing URLs scraped from websites that collect and analyze such things. Like Norton, Bitdefender, and ZoneAlarm Extreme Security, Avast scored an excellent 99% detection rate in this test; however, others have achieved even better results. AVG and ESET achieved 100% success in their latest phishing tests, as did Avira Prime, McAfee, and Webroot Premium.
Other Shared Security Features
While the business suite reviewed here doesn’t boast the same collection of features as the consumer edition, it does hit all the high points. Here are some additional features to protect your company's computers.
Ransomware Shield Prevents Unauthorized Changes
Ransomware that encrypts your personal files can be a problem, but ransomware that shuts down your business can be devastating. And the malware coders behind those ransomware attacks see businesses as much more likely to pay up. Avast’s antivirus shields should eliminate ransomware just like any other type of malware, but just in case, this suite’s Ransomware Shield provides extra protection for files in sensitive folders, Documents, Downloads, and Desktop by default. Consider carefully where the most important files reside. You may want to add the Pictures folder, for example.
(Credit: Avast/PCMag)To test this shield, I turned off the regular antivirus protection, carefully isolated the test system from the network, and released more than a dozen real-world ransomware samples. The ransomware shield did nothing to stop two samples that act on the whole disk rather than files, which makes sense, as it’s designed to protect against tampering with files, not disks. Two others simply didn’t do anything and hence didn’t trigger protection.
(Credit: Avast/PCMag)That leaves 10 file-encrypting ransomware samples. Avast detected and blocked ransomware behavior by eight of those, ensuring no change to files in protected folders. However, all but one managed to encrypt files outside Avast’s protection, anywhere from a few dozen to more than 10,000. That leaves two that totally slipped past Avast’s ransomware shield. Do remember, though, that to perform this test, I had to turn off all other shields.
Simple Firewall
Where antivirus software protects you against malicious programs, a firewall prevents network-based attacks. Avast’s firewall comes preconfigured with rules for private networks and for more dangerous public networks. Each time you make a new connection, it asks whether it’s public or private. Your employees don’t need to make any changes to firewall settings. In fact, you should leave them alone yourself, unless you’re an expert.
(Credit: Avast/PCMag)In addition to blocking attacks from outside the network, Avast manages application permissions to prevent your apps from abusing the network connection. Like Norton, it defaults to making those configuration decisions independently. You can configure it so it asks what to do each time it encounters a new program requesting network access, but you really shouldn’t. Your employees aren’t qualified to make that decision.
(Credit: Avast/PCMag)I always check a firewall’s resistance to termination, using techniques available to a malware coder. As in previous tests, Avast resisted all attempts to terminate its 11 processes, simply returning Access Denied. The situation was a bit different with its eight Windows services. Four of them resisted all attempts to stop the service or disable it from launching at startup. For another two, the program requested confirmation that I was really trying to stop the service. The remaining two weren’t protected. That’s better than in some of my past evaluations, but I still wonder why Avast doesn’t simply protect all its services.
Network Inspector
Although keeping track of devices on your network is a complex task, Avast’s Network Inspector is available to all users. Upon launch, it scans your network and reports any network-level issues. If you verify that you own the network, it then lists all the devices it finds. The scan attempts to identify the name and type of each device found; it also scans each device for security holes.
(Credit: Avast/PCMag)As the boss, you’ll want to run this scan and peruse the list of found devices. For those unknowns that Avast can’t identify, you may want to do some sleuthing using the supplied IP address and MAC address. When you successfully identify a device, you can rename it directly in the scan report, and Avast will remember that name. And, of course, if the report identifies any security issues, you’ll need to address them.
Once you’ve made that initial scan, you can configure Avast to monitor the network and report any time a new device connects. If you don’t recognize the newcomer, it could be an intruder, so it’s worth following up on these notifications. Unfortunately, I was unable to activate this feature for testing. It was turned off, and the switch to turn it on was disabled. My Norton contacts confirm this is a known bug that will be fixed soon.
Basic VPN
While Avast’s antivirus components protect your documents and data from attack by malicious programs on the computer, they have no power over that data when it travels the wild and wooly internet. To protect your data in transit, you need a virtual private network, commonly referred to as a VPN. The VPN sends your data in an encrypted form to a secure VPN server, and from there, it establishes the connection you requested. This serves to hide your actual location, so trackers can’t geolocate you. Spoofing your location can also let you access geo-locked content.
When your company computers are connected through the company network, they’re relatively safe. If your remote workers hook up through a shady internet café’s Wi-Fi, that could be a problem. Your Avast subscription includes Avast SecureLine VPN for each device. Please read our review of the VPN for full details. Then make it a company policy to always use the VPN when outside the corporate network.
(Credit: Avast/PCMag)If you just flip the VPN’s big connection button from off to on, Avast sends your encrypted data through what it determines is the fastest server. That’s sufficient for protecting your data in transit. You can also choose from over 100 cities in 66 countries. Those numbers are higher than when we last reviewed the product, but Avast’s server collection still skews heavily toward Europe (over 40%) and North America (over 30%).
(Credit: Avast/PCMag)To encrypt your traveling data, a VPN uses one of a handful of known encryption protocols. We at PCMag lean toward OpenVPN and WireGuard because they’re open source projects. Avast supports both, with WireGuard being the default. You can also choose Avast’s own Mimic protocol, which attempts to fool sites that ban VPN connections by imitating a standard HTTPS connection.
Many dedicated VPN apps offer advanced features to enhance their protection. With some, you can choose a multi-hop option, meaning your traffic passes through two VPN servers. Others offer split tunneling, allowing you to divert traffic for specific apps or websites to connect without using the VPN. A few build in direct support for using the TOR anonymization network. Avast skips all these advanced features, though it does include a kill switch feature. If your VPN connection drops, the kill switch ensures that no data is sent out without protection.
(Credit: Avast/PCMag)Connecting with a VPN is almost always slower than without, since the data must travel farther and make extra stops. In our VPN speed tests, Avast produced inconsistent results. It put an above-average drag on file uploads and connection latency, but file downloads ran faster with Avast’s VPN active. We also determined that Avast’s privacy policy is transparent and understandable, although the company gathers more information than some of its competitors. The app handles all basic VPN tasks, and it’s easy to use. Since it's part of the suite’s protection, it's worth using.
One more note. The standalone VPN supports Windows, macOS, Android, and iOS. This suite doesn’t include mobile protection. However, it also doesn’t include VPN protection for macOS, an omission I find peculiar.
Other Shared Features
Like its consumer-facing counterpart, this suite includes a sandbox feature that allows you to run suspect programs without letting them make any permanent changes. This feature is too advanced for most consumers, and likely for most of your employees as well. And do you really want them running suspect programs?
It’s creepy to imagine a pervy hacker peeping at you through your computer’s webcam or listening in on your private conversations. In a business setting, however, this type of spyware attack is more likely to be an instance of industrial espionage. Imagine your laptop’s mic coerced into listening in on your top-secret strategy meeting. Webcam Shield tracks which programs access the webcam and microphone, allowing access only for known and trusted programs and alerting you to access by unknown programs. If it flags a new video conferencing app that you’re testing, just click to allow it. But if you didn’t initiate the webcam connection, hit block. Bitdefender and Norton offer a similar webcam protection feature.
(Credit: Avast/PCMag)A few of the shared features are a bit esoteric. Browser Shield, turned off by default, promises to prevent malware from accessing browser passwords and cookies. However, your team should be using a powerful third-party password manager, not the browser’s built-in one. And cookie-based attacks are rare.
When a security suite’s feature collection includes encryption for sensitive files, it’s common to find a data shredder component. After encrypting files, you shred the originals so nobody, not even the NSA, can recover them. Avast skips the encryption, but its Data Shredder is more powerful than most. In addition to shredding files, it can also shred entire drives or erase all unused space on a drive.
(Credit: Avast/PCMag)Browser Shield gets a place of honor in the main window’s Privacy page, but to find Remote Access Shield, you’ll have to dig into Settings. This feature, also disabled by default, aims to protect the subject computer from Remote Access Trojans (RATs) and other attacks that utilize remote desktop features. Might as well turn it on.
Also found by digging into Settings, and also disabled by default, Real Site foils DNS-based attacks. This feature seems to correspond to Web Hijack Guard in Avast’s consumer suite. DNS, the Domain Name System, is responsible for translating human-readable domain names, such as pcmag.com, into machine-friendly IP addresses, like 2606:4700::6810:1576. A DNS spoofing or poisoning attack can hijack this process, causing your browser to point to a fraudulent website, with the address bar displaying the URL you expect. Once again, you might as well turn it on.
Features Absent From the Business Edition
I mentioned that quite a few features from the consumer edition didn’t make it into the business suite. To be clear, Avast for business covers all the essentials. The missing features are extras that are more likely to be of importance to individuals rather than businesses.
Email Guardian checks web-based email accounts for malicious attachments and content. However, to function, it requires that you grant Avast full access to your account, which must be associated with a service such as Google, Outlook, AOL, Comcast, GMX, Mail.ru, Seznam, Web.de, Yahoo, or Yandex. Chances are good that your business doesn’t rely on these consumer-centered services for email. Even if it does, turning over account access to a third party is a non-starter.
Avast’s Bank Mode, similar to Bitdefender’s Safepay and ESET’s Safe Banking & Browsing, offers enhanced security for sensitive activities such as online banking. One might argue that some online business activity might merit this protection. But you probably don’t want to encourage your staff to do their online banking at work.
Several of the non-shared features involve personal identity protection. Once you’ve entered your email addresses, Dark Web Monitoring reports any data breaches that have exposed them. Sensitive Data Shield scans your documents for personal information and applies restrictions on which user accounts and apps can access those sensitive documents. There’s a Tracking Prevention component dedicated to preventing browser fingerprinting, without the other features that make up the full Avast AntiTrack. Finally, Private Mode is a simple switch that (somewhat redundantly) turns on the VPN and Tracking Prevention and then opens your default browser in Incognito / Private / InPrivate mode.
Avast’s consumer suites include several components designed to enhance system performance, including Disk Cleaner, Driver Updater, Duplicate Finder, and Software Updater. The business edition, reviewed here, focuses on security and omits these performance items.
Business Hub and Features
So far, I’ve described what you see on any PC or Mac that’s protected by Avast’s business suite. That’s what you’ll see on the computer you use for yourself, and that’s what your employees will see. However, as the boss, you manage security for all the company’s computers from a single online dashboard, which is quite a different experience.
To dig into the serious business of managing security, you start by visiting the Avast Business Hub. The hub opens to a dashboard page that gives you an overview of recent activity.
(Credit: Avast/PCMag)Scrolling through the main dashboard page, you’ll find numerous panels with useful information about your company’s overall security health. One panel lists recent alerts, with links to more details about each. You can take a suggested action or dismiss each alert. Another panel presents a high-level chart of threats identified across the system over the last 14 days, with the option to drill down for a more detailed chart and a precise report of all the threats.
There’s a similar panel that charts blocked web traffic, with a link to the full report. And you can quickly see a breakdown of your device status: No issues, Vulnerable, or In Danger. Rounding out the main dashboard is a panel that suggests features you should enable. On my test system, it touted the new Web Control component, which I’ll describe below.
Down the left side of the Hub page is a menu: Dashboard, Alerts, Devices, Policies, Reports, Users, Company profile, and Subscriptions. The Alerts page gathers all alerts, both pending and resolved, and encourages you to resolve the pending ones. On the Reports page, you can select reports like the threat summary and device status report mentioned above, along with several others. I’ll cover the remaining items below.
Remote Installation
Large business security systems are managed by the IT department, which has the ability to remotely push out updates or new security installations. Through the Business Hub’s Network Discovery system, located on the Devices page, you can also perform remote installation of your Avast security protection, at least on Windows PCs.
To start, you designate the computer you’re using as a scanning agent. Next, you run the network scan. This is likely to generate a daunting list of devices and IP addresses, but you can ignore most of them. In the rightmost column, titled Status, click the funnel icon to filter the results. Check all the boxes except Unmanageable.
(Credit: Avast/PCMag)Now you can request remote installation for each PC with Unmanaged status. Check the device and click Install Security Service. When using a downloaded installer, you’ll want to check all the installation choices: Antivirus, Web Control, VPN, and USB Protection. Scroll down to enter the login credentials for the device, then click to initiate the remote installation. Repeat this process for all unmanaged devices—the status for each will change to Installation Queued and eventually to Managed by Avast.
That’s what should happen, but I didn’t experience it in testing. Upon consulting with Avast support, I learned that this feature is still in beta and, based on log analysis, it is used by almost nobody. An existing corporate network almost certainly already has mechanisms in place for remote installation. You can also use techniques like sending employees an email with an installation link. As you'll see, regardless of how the installation is carried out, once it's complete, the device is fully under remote control.
Remote Monitoring and Management
As noted, the dashboard breaks down the status of your company’s devices. If any device shows a status other than No Issues, you click Devices from the menu for more details. In most cases, you’ll be able to fix whatever’s wrong remotely.
(Credit: Avast/PCMag)Norton can also fix reported problems remotely, but its remote management stops there. Avast takes the concept much further. From the detail page for a device, you can restart or shut down that device—don’t worry, the user gets a warning. You can also uninstall Avast remotely.
(Credit: Avast/PCMag)More useful, you can remotely launch a full, quick, custom, or boot-time scan. And there’s an option to trigger an antivirus update or check for product updates. Bitdefender offers a similar set of remote options, though not as extensive as Avast’s.
Policies for Global Control
As noted, most small business security suites typically support up to 20 or 25 users. Avast supports way more than that, though I don’t imagine it’s often used for more than a couple of dozen. Still, installing protection on 20 computers and then configuring them all to your liking could be a tough task. ESET solves the problem, in a way, by letting you save and restore settings. Configure one device, save your work, then restore the settings on all the other devices.
Avast starts with the premise that you’ll want all your devices to be configured the same, even new ones that you add later. It handles this by letting you define one or more policies. Documentation suggests creating two policies: one default policy for employee computers and a separate policy with settings tailored for your servers. ESET offers a pre-configured edition for use on servers. Bitdefender gives you one to five licenses for its server edition, depending on how many employees you choose to protect.
(Credit: Avast/PCMag)Since the default policy control settings for all your devices, you’d be wise to explore and configure that policy before performing installations. Begin by reviewing the antivirus options. Here you can toggle the core shields and other features on or off. You may also want to make some adjustments, such as enabling Real Site and Remote Access Shield by default.
Some features, for example, Data Shredder and Network Inspector, don’t have an on-off toggle. You have the option to uninstall those features from all devices using the policy; however, Avast warns that doing so will set the status of each device to In Danger.
As noted, you can define multiple policy sets; however, it is recommended to limit this to no more than two: the default and a policy for server installations, if necessary.
Web Control for Content Filtering
Parental control is a common feature in consumer-side security suites. A parental control system typically filters out content inappropriate for kids and also helps manage their screen time. Some do much more. Avast’s Web Control works much like a parental content filter, but with a business orientation.
With Avast, you configure the content filter through the policy system. By default, all access is allowed, but you can block sites matching almost five dozen categories, organized into eight broader areas. You’ll surely want to block the Security Concern and Web Control avoidance areas, and likely the Potentially Inappropriate area as well.
(Credit: Avast/PCMag)If one of your employees attempts to visit a blocked site, Avast displays the same restricted website warning that it uses for dangerous or fraudulent sites, citing the category that triggered it. You can optionally add administrator contact information for that brave employee who wants to request an exception to access a particular site.
(Credit: Avast/PCMag)Most of us have been warned not to expect privacy when using a company computer. Indeed, as an administrator, you can check Web Control activity for any of your company computers. The report categorizes the types of sites visited, providing detailed lists of any dangerous or blocked sites based on category. It’s not a full record of an employee's online activity, just iffy activity. Still, it's worth noting (and reminding employees) that browsing is definitely not a private activity.
USB Protection
While most malware reaches your computer via email or a dodgy website, those aren’t the only avenues for infection. A competitor might scatter USB drives in your company’s parking lot, hoping one of your staff will plug in the gimmicked device and unleash espionage malware. Avast’s answer to this threat is simple—disable use of USB devices, with an option to exclude optical disks.
(Credit: Avast/PCMag)Yes, this ban is heavy-handed. Fortunately, you can define specific known and trusted USB devices as exclusions. When you go to add an exclusion, Avast lists the USB drives that have been used in any of your company's computers. Just check off the trusted ones and you’re ready to go, with USB usage under control. Excluded devices will still connect as usual, while attempting to use any other device will result in a warning to contact the administrator.
(Credit: Avast/PCMag)ESET also offers device control, but it’s implemented rather differently. Rather than a blanket ban on USB devices, ESET lets you manage each type of device separately. You can block the device entirely, block writing to the device, or merely warn that use of the device will be logged. You can also define exceptions for individual devices, device types, and users.
ESET’s system offers much more fine-grained control, but I’m not sure how many bosses will take the time to configure it, especially given that ESET’s configuration settings affect just the computer on which you created them. Avast’s company-wide control is straightforward and much easier to use.
Server Support for Exchange and SharePoint
If you scroll down the Antivirus policy settings, you’ll find entries near the bottom for Exchange and SharePoint. These aren’t installed by default, which makes sense for endpoint computers. In the policy listing, neither 'on' nor 'off' is selected. Rather, the trash can icon is highlighted.
(Credit: Avast/PCMag)When you’re devising a separate policy for your company servers, you can click the trash can to install one or both. Of course, your choice will depend on whether you actually use Exchange or SharePoint.
Other Policy Settings
The biggest part of any Avast policy is antivirus, but there are other significant settings to consider. By default, the policy’s firewall rules override any local changes; you can switch to let the user make changes, but why would you?
If needed, your policy can define proxy settings for all company computers. You can also choose how to handle configuration changes that require the local computer to reboot. By default, if a restart is needed, Avast performs it at 10 p.m. You can set it to restart when the user logs out, or restart as soon as requested. Even in that last case, the user gets a 60-minute warning.
There’s an entry for VPN settings in the policy. It makes sense to me that the boss might want to control things like when the VPN kicks in and which server to use. Selecting this item just reveals a note advising you to configure the VPN on each device’s page. And when I followed that advice, I found the only choice was to enable or disable the VPN. I’d like to see detailed VPN settings controlled by policy, just as antivirus settings are.
Final Thoughts
(Credit: Avast)
Avast Premium Business Security
Avast Premium Business Security prioritizes the essentials to focus on what businesses need, enabling you to monitor and manage every company computer remotely and install protection as needed.







