Pros & Cons
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- One high antivirus lab score
- Top-notch ransomware protection
- Protection for Windows, macOS, Android, and iOS
- Local backup and restore
- Additional security tools
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- Dismal phishing protection
- Backup doesn’t work correctly with default settings
- No hosted online storage for backup
- Some bonus tools don’t work
- No suite features added to macOS antivirus
- Very little security in iOS app
K7 Ultimate Security Specs
| Antispam | |
| Backup | |
| Behavior-Based Detection | |
| Firewall | |
| Malicious URL Blocking | |
| On-Access Malware Scan | |
| On-Demand Malware Scan | |
| Parental Control | |
| Phishing Protection | |
| Protection Type | Security Suite |
| Tune-Up | |
| Virtual Keyboard | |
| VPN | None |
| Vulnerability Scan | |
| Webcam Protection | |
| Website Rating |
When security companies release a product line update, they typically update the whole line, from the standalone antivirus up to the most feature-packed security suite. Not K7. The antivirus and entry-level suite from 10 years ago hardly look different from today’s versions. K7 Ultimate Security, though, has a newer appearance, introduced just a couple of years ago. K7 Ultimate remains the company’s top-tier mega-suite, with a plentiful collection of features and security on multiple platforms. However, the effectiveness of these features ranges from very good to very bad. K7 does have the virtue of an unusually low price, but before diving into the bargain bin, you should consider Editors’ Choice Norton 360 Deluxe. Yes, it costs more, but its cross-platform components are all superior, and it includes VPN and online backup. Editors’ Choice Bitdefender Total Security is also well worth a look. It outdoes K7 in sheer number of features, and they all work well.
How Much Does K7 Ultimate Security Cost?
A one-device subscription for K7 Ultimate Security, K7’s top-tier suite, sets you back just $35 per year, the lowest price among this top tier of suites. It’s lower than any entry-level suite I’ve covered except for the related K7 Total Security and the lackluster Comodo Internet Security Pro. G Data Internet Security and G Data Total Security come close, at $39.95 and $49.95, respectively. At the high end, Panda Dome Premium goes for $139.99. Yes, that’s a one-license price.
K7 remains a price leader for three-device subscriptions, at $53 per year. Here, too, only K7’s entry-level suite and Comodo cost less. At this level, other top-tier suites range from G Data’s $55.95 per year to Panda’s $159.99.
When it comes to protecting five devices, some competitors start to catch up with K7’s $79 price. Avast One Silver, ESET Home Security Premium, and Total Defense Premium Internet Security cost just a bit more, $79.99 per year. ESET Home Security Essential, F-Secure Internet Security, and ZoneAlarm Extreme Security go for $10 per year less than K7.
Many competing suites cost quite a bit more than K7 for five licenses. Bitdefender Total Security, for example, costs $109.99 per year for five licenses. Norton 360 Deluxe runs you $119.99 per year, though admittedly, you get a lot: five security suite licenses, five full-powered VPN licenses, and 50GB of online storage for your backups.
At the one- and three-device tiers, K7 beats out all the best competitors. When you get to five devices, it still beats most of them. These consistently low prices have earned K7 a spot in PCMag’s Budget Buys list, along with K7’s antivirus and entry-level suite.
Do note that McAfee+ doesn’t fit the standard price comparison. At its lowest tier, it costs $149.99 per year, but that fee covers every device in your household, including devices running Windows, macOS, Android, iOS, and even ChromeOS. Higher tiers add identity theft protection.
Getting Started With K7 Ultimate
As with K7’s entry-level suite, installing this suite is quick and easy. Once you've updated its antivirus definitions and activated the product (or launched a 30-day trial), you're ready to go.
K7’s antivirus and entry-level suite have a blocky, slightly awkward display, with screens sliding in from various directions. It’s not always easy to find the feature you want. They also exhibit signs of age, things like five-year-old features marked “new” and an emphasis on the defunct Internet Explorer. K7 Ultimate, the top-tier suite reviewed here, has a friendlier interface.
(Credit: K7/PCMag)The main window still prominently features stats on the latest update, virus definition version, and subscription duration, just below a large status banner. Below the stats, the four icons for Scan, Update, Tools, and Wi-Fi Advisor are joined by a new one, Backup. Not seen in the old interface, an activity box at right reports the number of threats detected, malicious URLs blocked, phishing URLs blocked, and firewall attacks blocked.
(Credit: K7/PCMag)You see bigger changes in pages like Settings and Tools. In the old interface, these pages held as many as six large buttons invoking suite features, with an easy-to-miss arrow sliding in additional pages for features past six. Now they simply scroll to hold as many features as needed.
Features Shared With K7 Antivirus
Everything you get with K7 Antivirus Premium also appears in this security suite, and you get quite a bit more than just antivirus. For the blow-by-blow saga of my antivirus testing, please read the antivirus review. I’ll offer a quick recap here.
I follow reports from four antivirus testing labs around the world. For years, two of them regularly included K7 in their reports. That’s gone down to one lab in the last few years, as AV-Comparatives stopped testing K7, but getting one lab’s attention is still good. Over 40% of the antivirus companies I follow don’t appear in any lab reports.
With a near-perfect 17.5 out of 18 possible points from AV-Test Institute, K7 earned the Top Product label. I should note that almost all products in the latest test report reached Top Product status, and most of them took the full 18 points.
Each of the four labs uses a different rating scheme, ranging from straight numeric scores to pass/fail. I’ve developed an algorithm to map all the scores onto a 10-point scale and merge them into an aggregate lab score. With just one report, K7 doesn’t merit an aggregate score, though its one score is good. AVG Internet Security managed a perfect 10 based on scores from two labs, and Avast’s near-perfect scores from four labs yield an impressive 9.9 points.
K7 didn’t do as well in my hands-on malware protection test, scoring 8.4 of 10 possible points. That’s the lowest score among products tested with my latest set of malware samples. Tested with those same threats, UltraAV scored a perfect 10. Avast, AVG, and Norton, all relying on the same antivirus engine, scored 9.7. Webroot Total Protection also scored 9.7 with its own unrelated antivirus technology.
I also test each antivirus by challenging it with 100 very fresh malware-hosting URLs, kindly supplied by the testing lab MRG-Effitas. I launch each one in turn and record whether the antivirus blocks access to the page, eliminates the malware on download, or sits idly without offering any protection.
K7’s antivirus doesn’t include web-level protection, so its score of 89% represents only those instances when it caught the malware on download. When I re-ran this test with K7 Total Security, the addition of web-level protection raised that score to 96%, a much better result.
Looking on the bright side, the antivirus performed perfectly in my ransomware protection test. For this test, I turned off all protective layers except behavior-based protection and tried to launch more than a dozen real-world ransomware attacks. K7 fended them all off, with no damage to the test system except for a single unimportant text file. That’s significant, as many competitors have allowed ransomware to encrypt dozens or even hundreds of files before behavior-based detection kicked in and quashed their activities.
(Credit: K7/PCMag)Even at the antivirus level, K7 includes a basic firewall that defends against hack attacks and prevents local programs from abusing your network connections. Other bonus features include a pair of simple privacy cleaners, a virtual keyboard, and vaccination of USB drives against infection.
A simple device control system lets you control the use of USB drives, CD/DVD drives, and floppies, but it’s nowhere near the full-scale device control found in G Data Total Security and a few others. The antivirus will also scan for security vulnerabilities, abnormal system setting changes, and tracking cookies.
As you can see, you get a lot of security features from K7 even at the standalone antivirus level. But as my review details, some of these are redundant or don’t work as they should.
Security Features Shared With K7 Total Protection
You need serious coding skills to create a malware program that can evade detection by both the operating system and antivirus software. Some cybercrooks skip the coding and attack the weakest link—the unsuspecting user. Rather than trying to scrape and exfiltrate personal data, a phishing attack simply tricks the user into giving away sensitive credentials. When an unsuspecting visitor logs in, the fraudsters capture the username and password and thereby own the account.
Sure, you can learn to spot these frauds, but it’s nice to have help from your antivirus. The phishing protection that’s missing from K7 AntiVirus shows up in both of K7’s security suites, but it’s not the boon you might expect.
To test phishing protection, I use hundreds of real-world fraudulent URLs gathered from phishing-centered websites. I test the antivirus alongside the phishing protection built into Chrome, Edge, and Firefox. K7 caught just 17% of the verified fraudulent pages, even worse than its previous score of 26% and among the lowest scores ever. Many competitors manage 100% detection in this test.
The Web Protection component marks up results in popular search engines, with a green icon for safe and a red one for dangerous. For that rare soul who still needs a local spam filter, K7 provides one. Webcam Protection prevents pervs from peeping through your webcam, and Privacy Service (in combination with the parental control system, oddly) halts accidental or malicious transmission of your personal information.
As noted, the behavior-based ransomware protection system performed perfectly in testing. However, it’s not the only weapon in K7’s anti-ransomware arsenal. Once you configure it, Data Locker prevents all unauthorized access to files in folders you’ve flagged as important, such as Documents and Pictures. If an actual ransomware attack weaseled past all the other protection layers, Data Locker would minimize the damage.
You get a boatload of additional tools with K7, but many of them aren’t very useful. Among the truly helpful tools are Secure Delete, which erases files beyond the possibility of forensic recovery; Virtual Keyboard, which allows you to enter passwords without any fear of keyloggers; USB Vaccination, which foils malware that spreads by infecting USB drives; and a Wi-Fi Advisor, which checks the security of your Wi-Fi connection.
Overall, K7 Total Security is a wide-ranging suite with plenty of good points and bad points too. It gets good scores from the independent labs, but poor ones in some of our hands-on tests. It lambasted a dozen real-world ransomware attacks, but its parental control system is useless. K7 Ultimate Security, reviewed here, fixes some problems and adds new features that also vary in efficacy.
Slightly Improved Parental Control in K7 Ultimate
The entry-level suite offers parental control. It allows parents to schedule each child’s internet access and block access to a blacklist of websites or all sites except those that are whitelisted. The parent is responsible for creating these lists, which means that the content filter component in the entry-level suite is effectively useless. No parent I know is going to sit down and make a list of every website that kids shouldn’t visit!
Upgrading to Ultimate kicks the parental control system up a tiny bit, into the not-entirely-useless realm. With this edition, parents get per-child category-based web filtering. You can choose to block sites matching any of more than 60 categories, arranged into seven areas: Adult, Business/Finance, General/Others, Internet Security, Lifestyle, Network Bandwidth, and Search/Communications.
You can check an area to select all included categories or pick and choose individual categories.
(Credit: K7/PCMag)There’s no age-based profile system—parents must pick the areas or categories they want to block. Unlike the blocked and allowed list systems, these settings apply to each child separately. Once you’ve made your selections for one child, there’s no provision to copy those as a starting point for another.
For testing purposes, I chose to block everything in the Adult and Internet Security areas. Then I tried visiting a few dozen likely inappropriate sites. It turns out that almost any site whose URL consists of a size adjective and a normally covered body part exists, and isn’t anything you’d want your kids to see. K7 only blocked about half of them. It also missed quite a few secure anonymizing proxy websites. A clever teen who finds such a proxy that’s not blocked by K7 can totally evade content filtering. As with the DIY blocked list, I found that K7’s content filter had no effect on an off-brand browser that I wrote myself.
The internet time control system and application blocker did prove effective in testing. Adding category-based content filtering brings K7’s parental control system up to the bare minimum, but it’s still easily defeated by using an off-brand browser or a secure anonymizing proxy. If you require parental control as a component of your security suite, you’ll do better choosing a suite with a full-featured parental control system, such as Norton 360 Deluxe.
Simple, Local Backup in K7 Ultimate
If a disastrous flood puts your office underwater or a vicious ransomware attack renders your important files inaccessible, you can still recover as long as you’ve maintained a full backup. Using a backup system, especially one that stores your files in the cloud or off-site, is the ultimate form of security. Unlike some competing products, K7’s backup doesn’t do anything until you perform its initial configuration, so you’ll want to do that right away.
The first step is to add a backup set, and K7 makes it easy. By default, a new backup set protects files of all types that reside in your My Documents folder. Or rather, it says that’s what it does. When I made the fateful click, it started listing what seemed to be the entire contents of the C:\Users folder. Then it went on to list non-existent folders, with “Application Data” appearing three or four times in the folder name. After 15 minutes, I clicked Cancel and found that it had imagined a collection of over 150,000 files occupying almost 30GB. What a fiasco!
(Credit: K7/PCMag)To avoid overrunning your backup destination with non-essential files, be absolutely sure to uncheck or delete the default My Documents item and actively add the Documents folder for your user account. When I did that, the preview scaled down to a much more reasonable 45 files, taking up not quite 5MB.
You can also add more files or folders to the backup set, exclude certain files or folders, or tell K7 to only back up files of specific types. Be warned that your choice of file types applies across all folders. You can’t choose to, say, back up just Office documents in one folder and just pictures in another.
K7 doesn’t make hosted online storage for backups available the way Norton and Total Defense Premium do. To be fair, this once-common feature is showing up in fewer products these days. Webroot and ZoneAlarm are among the companies that have dropped backup. With no cloud backup, your destination choices are limited to local drives, USB drives, and removable media. Backup to removable media is necessarily a manual operation, as you sit there feeding in discs as needed.
If the destination is a regular disk drive, you can schedule daily or weekly backups, or set K7 to back up automatically during idle time. Name the backup set, optionally define a password, and you’re done.
(Credit: K7/PCMag)Restoring files from backup is equally simple. Use the handy search box to select the files you want, or just restore all files. You can restore to the original location or pick a new location. That’s it.
Norton used to offer local backups, just like K7, but recently dropped that feature. That’s not a problem, as it still comes with 50GB of hosted online storage. More expensive Norton suites include LifeLock protection and up to 500GB of storage. If an out-of-control self-driving car takes out your office, computers, and all, you’ll still have those cloud backups with Norton. Not so with K7.
There’s nothing fancy about this backup system. Your backups are all local. It doesn’t keep multiple versions of backed-up files. But if having a backup helps you recover from a ransomware attack, you’ll be glad you enabled it.
Additional Tools in K7 Ultimate
Clicking Tools from the main window in K7’s entry-level suite brings up a two-page list with the following choices: Activity History Eraser, Computer TuneUp, Disk Optimization, IE History Cleaner, Internet Temp Cleaner, Secure Delete, USB Vaccination, Virtual Keyboard, and Windows Temp Cleaner. Of these, the most useful are Secure Delete, to erase files beyond forensic recovery; USB Vaccination, to foil malware that infects via USB; and Virtual Keyboard, to let you enter passwords with no worries about keyloggers, even hardware keyloggers.
(Credit: K7/PCMag)Instead of two pages with arrows to switch, K7 Ultimate Security puts all the tools in a single scrolling list. The list isn’t alphabetized or organized in any obvious way, so you’ll do some scrolling to find any particular feature. This top-tier suite also adds four new items: Browser Cleaner, Duplicate File Finder, Memory Booster, and Registry Cleaner.
The tool collection already includes cleaner components for various temp files and history traces, so why do we need a Browser Cleaner? It turns out the Browser Cleaner has a completely different aim. You start by running a quick scan that lists all your browsers and their installed extensions. K7 helps you ditch unwanted extensions or remove all extensions and bring your browsers back to a pristine state.
(Credit: K7/PCMag)To see this component in action, I added several random extensions to Chrome, Edge, Firefox, and Opera, then ran the scan for extensions. The result was stunningly bad. K7 found its own extension and one other in the now-defunct Internet Explorer, but didn’t register anything in the other four browsers. There’s a button titled Reset All Browsers, implying it should work with, well, all browsers! I clicked that and scanned again, with no change. This feature does nothing useful.
(Credit: K7/PCMag)Duplicate File Finder, on the other hand, can prove very helpful, especially on a system that’s littered with identical files. It won’t find 0-byte files or files bigger than 4GB, but that’s not a significant limitation. You do have to tell it where to search, bearing in mind that it doesn’t automatically search subfolders. And you’d be wise to check the list of file types covered—for example, I had to add CSV to the list for my test. You can manually pore over the list of found dupes and choose which to keep, but it’s easier to just let K7 delete all but the first of each group. If you’re short on disk space, you can have it skip sending deleted files to the Recycle Bin. After all, you do have another copy.
(Credit: K7/PCMag)As for Memory Boost, I couldn’t see that it improved anything, but at least it worked quickly. You open the component to view the used and free memory percentages. Click Start, and after a few seconds, you’ll see the percentages change, tilting toward free.
That leaves the Registry Cleaner, which aims to rid your system's Registry of useless and erroneous items. You can choose which of seven categories to search, but the average user isn’t equipped to make that choice. Just leave them all checked. In testing, the scan took next to no time before displaying a summary of its findings, well over a hundred of them. Each was an entry pointing to a non-existent file. Tech experts can choose to clean up selected items, but for most users, the Repair All option is appropriate. In testing, the repair process was near-instantaneous.
Other Platforms That K7 Ultimate Supports
When you go to download K7, you’ll see that you can use your K7 Ultimate Security licenses to install protection on devices running macOS, Android, or iOS, up to the number of licenses you paid for. Just install the software and use your license key to activate it.
(Credit: K7/PCMag)K7 AntiVirus for Mac
I logged into my K7 account, downloaded the macOS installer, and activated it using my registration key. I was disappointed to find that what it installed was simply K7 AntiVirus for Mac, with no added suite-level features. Please read my review of that product for a full analysis. I’ll summarize here briefly.
K7 doesn’t require the very latest macOS—it supports versions back to 10.10 (Yosemite). As a standalone product, it costs more than the corresponding Windows antivirus, though it does less. Like its Windows equivalent, it doesn’t attempt to detect malware-hosting websites or phishing frauds. None of the independent labs vouch for its efficacy.
(Credit: K7/PCMag)K7’s full scan checked several hundred thousand files for malware in five minutes, quite a bit faster than most. Most Mac-centered antivirus apps do their best to eliminate any Windows malware that comes their way, and indeed, when last tested, K7’s Mac edition detected 72% of my Windows samples. This time, it scanned my current 90 Windows malware samples and cheerfully reported no threats found.
On the Mac, K7 offers only the very basics of antivirus. If you must use it, buy a Mac-only subscription separately rather than wasting one of your more expensive security suite licenses.
K7 Mobile Security for Android
To install K7 on my test Android, I logged in to my account and sent an installation link via email. Authentication isn’t baked into the link, but at least the email included my registration code. Full activation requires both that code and your login credentials. You can also just install the free K7 Mobile Security from the Play Store. As soon as you tap for a non-free feature like anti-theft, you’ll be prompted to go through the activation process.
(Credit: K7/PCMag)As part of the installation process, K7 requests a raft of permissions, including TKTK. It requests a few others, such as TKTK, when you first use a feature that requires them. I appreciated getting a bunch of permissions out of the way from the start.
Mobile Security Dashboard Features
The app’s main dashboard window is divided into four sections representing Call Blocking, K7 Mobitrack (anti-theft), Malware Protection, and Web Protection. A simple Scan Device button is at the top. Tapping the hamburger menu at the top left brings up more feature choices.
(Credit: K7/PCMag)K7’s scan ran quickly and, unsurprisingly, reported no malware. Tapping the Malware Protection panel brings up a settings page that lets you control scheduled scanning. By default, K7 runs a weekly scan, but you can set it to daily or monthly, or turn off scheduling. This page also controls what K7 scans. Out of the box, it scans new apps on installation, scans the device’s storage, and includes user apps in its manual scan. You can extend its coverage to system apps and optionally have it run a scan after any system update. It’s fine to turn on those optional scans, but don’t turn off any of the defaults.
Web Protection aims to protect browsers and other apps from malware-hosting sites and phishing fraud. On Windows, the corresponding feature earned a good score against malware-hosting URLs but tanked my phishing protection test. I verified that the feature works on Android.
For mobile devices, loss or theft is as much or more of a danger than malware infestations. At the premium level, K7 offers a full-scale anti-theft and tracking system. You can remotely locate, lock, or wipe your phone, as expected. If you’ve just misplaced it around the house, a remote-triggered alarm helps you find it. It doesn’t automatically snap pictures of a device thief the way Bitdefender Total Security does, but you can call for a photo op remotely.
(Credit: K7/PCMag)The Android device I use for testing isn’t provisioned for cellular connectivity, so I couldn’t test the Call Blocking feature. It looks simple enough. You add unwanted phone numbers to a list, and it blocks calls from those numbers.
Android Features Reached From the Menu
K7 puts essential features like malware protection and anti-theft on the dashboard, but those prominent components aren’t its only security weapons. Tapping the hamburger menu at top left brings up another set of features: App Resource Management, Application Overview, Backup / Restore, Scan Now, and Wi-Fi Checker. Scan Now duplicates the button at the top of the dashboard, but the rest provide insights and security for your Android.
(Credit: K7/PCMag)Application Overview lists permission types with potential for abuse, such as determining your location, managing SMS messages, and making calls. For each type, it reports the number of apps with this permission. You can dig into each permission type for a full app list, and open any app to see its recent activity. Do scan the list for anomalies such as a flashlight app with SMS permissions.
There’s some overlap with the App Resource Management feature. Selecting this one simply lists all apps, without regard for what permissions they may have. Tapping an app from the list goes to the same activity page that you can reach from Application Overview.
(Credit: K7/PCMag)Chances are good your contacts are stored in the cloud, not just on your phone. For suspenders-and-belt assurance that you won’t lose those, you can invoke K7’s simple backup and restore system for contacts. The Wi-Fi Checker rounds out this app’s features. It’s meant to manage a list of trusted Wi-Fi sources, but I couldn’t figure out how to add to the list.
Before you consider expending one of your K7 Ultimate Security licenses on an Android installation, note that the Android app alone costs just $12 per year. With a five-device suite license, you pay about $16 on a per-device basis, while subscriptions for fewer devices cost more for each device.
K7 Mobile Security for iOS
Installed on my test iPad, K7 had the same general appearance as on Android. Both open to a dashboard with four large square buttons, and both have a three-line hamburger menu at the top left. The Android app also includes a Scan Device button, absent in the iOS edition, which, like most iOS security apps, doesn’t include malware protection.
(Credit: K7/PCMag)While both mobile editions feature a home screen with four large panels, the contents of those panels are mostly different. Under iOS, the panels are CheckUrl, Privacy, K7 MobiTrack, and SafeBrowser.
K7 MobiTrack is a very limited version of the anti-theft system compared with what you get with Android. From the remote tracking console, you can check the device’s location, and you can sound a noisy alarm. However, you can’t lock or wipe it. To be fair, this is true of virtually every iOS-based mobile security system.
(Credit: K7/PCMag)SafeBrowser is a proprietary browser built into the app, but it’s extremely limited. You can type in URLs or tap for top sites in a list preloaded with Twitter and Facebook. That’s it for browser features. You won’t find tabs, history, or any advanced browser features. The one thing SafeBrowser does is check the safety of any website you visit, and it doesn’t do that very well.
To test SafeBrowser, I tried to visit a dozen malware-hosting websites that triggered a warning from Safe Surf when I tested K7’s Windows antivirus. Some didn’t load properly. For some, SafeBrowser displayed the malware EXE file as if it were a demented text file. The one thing it did not do was identify any of the pages as dangerous. I managed to poke it into action using the phishing test page supplied by the AMTSO (anti-malware testing standards organization), so I know it can flag dangerous pages. It just failed to do so for any of the actual dangerous pages I used in testing.
(Credit: K7/PCMag)The separate feature called CheckUrl takes any URL you type into it and reports whether it’s safe. I see no reason for this feature to exist, given that SafeBrowser should warn you about dangerous URLs. When I used it to check the same URLs I used for testing SafeBrowser, it reported every single one as safe, including the AMTSO phishing page. This feature is useless.
When you tap Privacy, it asks you to log into Facebook. After I did so, it just stayed in Facebook, so I backed out and tried again. This time, it showed a page with the label Recommended Settings at the top and then sat with a loading spinner for more than 10 minutes. I terminated and restarted the app, with the same result. Perhaps a change to Facebook’s configuration broke this feature. Even when it did work during my previous review, it couldn’t actively improve your Facebook privacy.
(Credit: K7/PCMag)As noted, tapping the hamburger menu icon reveals additional functions. On iOS, these are Backup/Restore, Data Usage, Safari Web Advisor, System Analyzer, and Wi-Fi Adviser [sic].
Safari Web Advisor provides another awkward way to invoke K7’s ineffective website safety rating. Tapping the menu item brings up an explanation of how to use it. In Safari, you tap the share box icon and then tap K7WebScanner in the list of options. A bland, uninformative box lets you know if the page is safe. As with SafeBrowser and CheckUrl, the only page I could find that got a not safe rating was the AMTSO phishing test page.
Other features invoked from the menu include backup and restore of contacts, as on Android; a simple usage tracker for cellular and Wi-Fi data; and a System Analyzer that reports on your device’s memory and storage disposition.
Installing K7 on an iOS device, you get a limited anti-theft system and three different ways to identify unsafe URLs, all of them awkward and ineffective. Flagging insecure Wi-Fi is a good thing, but contact backup is redundant, as your contacts are almost certainly in the cloud. And there’s no security benefit to viewing data usage or parsing details about memory usage. I wouldn’t advise expending one of your K7 licenses on this limited app.








