Your Business Deserves the Best


What makes KeyScrambler Premium a must-have security component for your enterprise?
The same features that make
KeyScrambler the world's best anti-keylogging software. Learn
more »
- A reliable layer of defense for your critical systems.
KeyScrambler Premium 2.5.0 protects users’ login credentials in Windows workstation, Active Directory
Domain, and Windows Vista’s User Account Control prompts (UAC). This feature helps prevent keyloggers from gaining access to your critical systems. It also reduces risks that a single breached computer will allow
an intruder to compromise other workstations and the company network.

Screenshot: KeyScrambler Premium Encrypting login info in Windows against Keylogging
- Great enhancement of workplace information security.
Whether you're writing emails to a client, creating a PowerPoint presentation for a conference, encrypting an
important company file or compressing a bunch of files, accessing a remote computer, managing your money or accounts,
creating a password manager, or writing a business plan, you are handling corporate information that may well be of
interest to eavesdroppers and cyber criminals. KeyScrambler Premium starts as you turn on your computer, works even on security compromised
computers, and greatly reduces risks of information theft at workplace.
Read security reports »
- Easy integration into your enterprise.
Compatible with other security programs and authentication methods such as tokens and smart cards, KeyScrambler
requires no change to your existing infrastructure when integrating into your enterprise. Deployment is as simple for multiple computers as for a single one.
While many other anti-malware programs
prove to be ineffective in dealing with new, unknown keyloggers, KeyScramble Premium protects your keystrokes in over
150 desk-top apps in the most crucial categories to safeguard your enterprise's digital
assets from existing and future keylogging attacks.
Watch the Video »
- Time Tested, Proven Success.
KeyScrambler's ingenious design and indefatigable product improvements help put KeyScrambler at the top of the privacy category on major
websites. Since its initial launch in August 2006, KeyScrambler has won praises from security experts,
bloggers and users all over the world.
Read reviews and
testimonials »

$44.99 per seat
20% off for 2-20 seats.
We offer substantial discounts and one year of free tech support to enterprises.
Extended contract is available for additional years of support.
Please contact us for volume discount. For questions about our products and services, please email us.
We will respond as soon as possible.
Is Your Business at Risk?
In an Internet Security Threat Report published by Symantec in April, 2009, keystroke loggers (keyloggers) are identified as the third most prevalent threat to confidential information in 2008, with 75 percent of malicious code infections having this
capability.
According to the report, "successfully installed keystroke loggers record keystrokes on compromised computers and then return the
data to the attacker. This can be achieved by emailing it to the attacker or by uploading the data to an
attacker-controlled website. The attacker can process the keystroke data to extract user account
credentials such as those for online banking websites, stock-trading websites, or online game accounts. Additional data, such as information typed in email messages or other documents, could also be exposed.
This information can then be sold in the underground economy or used to launch further attacks."
One of Symantec's recommendations: "To reduce the likelihood of identity theft,
organizations that store personal information should
take the necessary steps to protect data transmitted over the Internet or stored on their computers." Read the Report »
In a 2008 study by a major British computer magazine, most anti-virus, anti-malware
programs tested could only detect 20- 30% of new malware. Read
the Article »
A Gartner survey of more than 4,500 online U.S. adults in August 2007 found that
phishing attacks in the United States soared in 2007 as $3.2 billion was lost to these attacks. 3.6
million adults lost money in phishing attacks in the 12 months ending in August 2007, as compared with the
2.3 million who did so the year before. Gartner experts believe that phishing and malware attacks will
continue to increase through 2009 because it's still a lucrative business for the perpetrators, and
advertising networks will be used to deliver up to 30 percent of malware that lands on consumer desktops.
Identity theft cost U.S. businesses $55.7 billion in 2006.
An estimated 8.3 million Americans older than 18 were victims of identity theft in
2005, according to an analysis of a phone survey released by the Federal Trade Commission. Among them,
1.8 million Americans discovered some type of fraud committed using their personal information, 3.2 million
had credit-card accounts misused and 3.3 million experienced misuse of other financial accounts. The
FTC estimates that identity theft cost American consumers $1.2 billion in 2006. Javelin
Strategy & Research reports that identity theft cost U.S. businesses $55.7 billion in the same year.
(Donna Borak, The Associated Press, December 2007)
A McAfee Avert Labs white paper, released in January of 2007, reports that the
number of keyloggers—malicious software code that tracks typing activity to capture passwords and other
private information—has increased by 250 percent between January 2004 and May 2006.
In March 2007, a Webroot study found that over 40 percent of the companies surveyed
reported business losses from a variety of spyware related issues and 26 percent of enterprises reported
that confidential information had been compromised as a result of spyware. The rate of spyware
infection is an alarming trend, as
- 39 percent of companies reported Trojan horse attacks;
- 24 percent reported system monitor attacks; and
- 20 percent reported pharming and keylogger attacks.
Other news report: Gartner Survey
Shows Phishing Attacks Escalated in 2007; New malware becomes harder to
detect; Keyloggers
stole from a city's coffers; Trickier
phishers target corporate executives; Antivirus
protection worse than a year ago.
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