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Norton Security Premium 5 Device 1 Year $39, Norton Security Standard 2 Devices 1 Year $16 @ Save on IT (Email Key)

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Norton Security Premium & Security Standard Specials!

Get the latest Norton Security Premium & Norton Security Standard at special discontinued price. The latest Norton Security replaces the previous Norton Anti-virus, Norton Internet Security and Norton 360.

Download version & product key is emailed during business hours on Monday to Friday. No shipping cost. Compatible with Windows, Mac or Android. The product key will be emailed on Monday 06/03

Norton Security Premium 5 Devices, 1 Years - AUD $39

Norton Security Standard 2 Devices, 1 Years - AUD $16

2% surcharge applies for c/c & Paypal transactions. No surcharge for direct deposit. Valid while stock last.

Norton Security Premium for Five Devices
Norton's best protection, plus PC backup and family safety features, for you and the people you care about. Benefits for you and your family:
*Protects up to 5 PCs, Macs, Androids and iOS devices with a single subscription
*Safeguards your identity and online transactions
*Protects better and faster than previous version
*Provides tools to help your kids safely explore the Internet
*Offers 25 GB of secure PC cloud backup, providing additional protection against ransomware

Comparison between Norton Security Standard & Premium

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closed Comments

  • Hi OP,

    Is there a time limit on when to activate the license? My current subscription is not due to end yet.

    Thanks

    • +1

      Hi Billy,

      There is no expiry date on the license.

  • -2

    A major part of my current job is to clean PC's of threats for customers. I have customers constantly ask me how did I get a virus/malware when I pay $150 and some $190 a year for Norton Security. From what I have seen of this product so far in my job is it does not stop all malware and threats. Running Malwarebytes picks up threats on many PC's that are running Norton Security Premium.

    • +4

      Contrary view. I've been using NIS (and earlier versions) since the late 90's and never had a problem. Absolute confidence. That should get the Norton hater trolls up and about .. :-) .. !!

      PS .. I did have one problem in this period. I bought a used laptop in 2005 and took it OS before I had a chance to install NIS. It laster less than an hour in Italy before it was frozen by a virus .. :-( .. !!

      • Friend, this sounds a little fish, less than an hour and you got a virus? Dodgy websites or free wifi perhaps? Also if youve been exclusively using Norton how can you say it's better than free alternatives such as Malwarebytes? I know for a fact that Norton can cause excruciating slowness on older laptops and I often get elderly people asking me for help with it.

        • +3

          How many years ago was this excruciating slowness? Norton has been pretty lean in the last 5 years at least.
          I too have run Norton since the 90's. There's been some years where it has run slower. I can say the same about Kaspersky. Their bank browser was unusable for a few years. Haven't tried it recently though.

        • Aaahh .. easy, I didn't actually say that .. :-) .. !!

    • like what exact malware can't be detected by Norton?

    • +2

      I'm wondering if the clients have been neglecting to have the virus definitions updated.

      • NIS is setup to auto update by default. An elderly or middle aged person that calls into a premium IT services call centre does not know how to turn off auto update for virus definitions.

    • Your comment is hardly a valid reason for a negative vote on this deal. Norton Security Premium can hardly be classed as a defective product. No one product guarantees safety from all malware/viruses. The prices your customers claim to pay is crazy, even at full retail it's less than $40 per year for a PC and much cheaper for multiple PC's. I regularly install the combination Malwarebytes and Norton Security Premium and it works well together. Are you suggesting users just use Malwarebytes?

      • The price I am quoting is paid at places like Harvey Norman and JB Hifi this is where it seems the up sell happens for NIS. I'm not a Norton hater by any means. I honestly just don't enjoy seeing the elderly ripped off just because they fear and don't know any better.

        • +2

          To give a negative vote must fall into one of 3 categories
          1. The deal is not the cheapest available
          2. Defective product
          3. Major issues with retailer

          Since you haven't mentioned 1 or 3 in your reason, you must have given this deal a negative vote because it is a defective product.

          Your comments were not really a valid reason to give a negative vote on this deal. There is no one product that can fully guarantee the safety of a PC. Norton does not do any worse then others I use like Bitdefender and Kaspersky.

          Even Malwarebytes admit their product should be used along side an Antivirus package:
          https://support.malwarebytes.com/customer/en/portal/articles…

          In general you're fairly safe using most of the top selling Antivirus packages, but none are perfect. Would you consider all them defective?

    • +1

      We do believe that Norton has improved over the past few years. However we do respect that everyone is entitled to their own preference when it comes to security software. This is why we stock a variety of options for customers to choose :)

  • Does the key work for Asia Pacific region???

    • Norton has become greedy the last couple of years by introducing region locking and regional pricing. Charging more for the same product via download is just greedy. There is no additional cost in distribution or support. Even a key bought direct from Amazon will not work in Australia anymore. I can't give this deal a positive vote until this question is answered.

      • Hi,

        It is to our understanding that the product key is only for Australia/New Zealand use. It is difficult for us to verify other region outside of Australia and Norton can change their policies as well from time to time.

  • Is it possible to stack these for a two or three year subscription?

    • In my experience stacking Norton licenses can be problematic. What usually happens is the second install restarts the licence clock to 365 days so you effectively loose the first. What you can do is just save the second licence until the first is near expiry. They have no use by date. Old, unused NIS licences from 12 -15 years ago can still be used.

      • Actually it's quite easy to stack. just do it through chat online with Nortons. Give them your new key and your existing key, they will then create a new key with the 12 months added to the original key expiry date. As a bonus if you had a lower version of Nortons and the new key was for a higher version, it would upgrade to the higher version for the whole time. Adding a year is usually easy, sometimes even 2 extra years can be stacked, but they try and talk you out of this.

  • +3

    From my experience with Norton, it is way to invasive and doesn't just work aswell as others such as malwarebytes.

  • +2

    Norton is a waste of money. Just get Bitdefender Free. It might block a few things you want on your computer, but once you sort that out, it's trouble free.

  • can any one tell me is this genuinely worth it for the 2 devices for $16AUD Im a uni student so money is tight.

  • What's the difference between Norton security and NIS? Are they the same? Can the key be used to activate/renew NIS?

    • Norton security is the new replacement for NIS. There will be no more NIS, NAV or Norton 360 moving forward. They will all be replaced by Norton security Standard or Norton Security Premium.

  • OP: Good offer, thanks.

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