Norton installs an Ethereum crypto miner with its 360 security suite

Ethereum coin
(Image credit: Getty Images/NurPhoto)

Norton is facing criticism for including a cryptocurrency mining program with its 360 security suite. Though Norton has been upfront about its plan to include the software, the move has generated a lot of backlash. Norton claims the miner is secure and reliable but the move raises concerns about the mechanics and ethics behind it.

Norton Crypto is turned off by default, but many users aren’t happy having it installed at all for various reasons including possible security concerns, suspicions, an aversion to crypto or environmental concerns among others. There’s also worries that the miner cannot be easily uninstalled. Could a malware app hijack the software and point it to a hacker’s wallet? If it happens to Norton—a security suite provider—then anything is possible.

Norton Crypto

(Image credit: NortonLifeLock (via Business Wire))

The program mines Ethereum to a pool made up of other Norton users. The rose-colored glasses view is that it makes it easy for non crypto savvy users to take their first steps into the crypto ecosystem via easy to use software that's provided by a trusted software developer. Given the proliferation of shady crypto malware, that's an understandable and some would say, positive development.

Norton’s miner will only run if it meets basic system requirements, so if you’re running an older or under spec machine of which there are countless millions, then it won’t run at all. So, while the miner is optional, transparent and run by a (mostly) reputable software company, that’s about where the positives end.

Your next upgrade

(Image credit: Future)

Best CPU for gaming: the top chips from Intel and AMD
Best graphics card: your perfect pixel-pusher awaits
Best SSD for gaming: get into the game ahead of the rest

Norton’s miner charges a 15% pool fee, which is frankly, ridiculous. Most Ethereum pools charge 1 or 2%, with a further small fee for the developer of the mining software. That's a far cry from Norton's 15%. When you add the cost of Ethereum’s transaction fees, which are very high in recent times due to network load, it's not easy to see how a user can make much of a profit. Then there’s the cost of electricity on top of that. In some cases, a user could end up in the red.

Perhaps the biggest issue is that Norton Crypto will expose users who don’t understand how crypto works. Norton deserves to be criticized for dangling the carrot of ‘free money’ in front of someone that doesn’t understand what they’re in for or the mechanisms behind crypto mining. It raises all kinds of ethical, social and economic concerns. Many would consider Norton’s actions to be predatory.

Whatever happens, Norton will be laughing all the way to the bank thanks to that rip-off 15% fee and if it starts raking in millions of dollars, it's only a matter of time before other legitimate software providers follow suit. Ethereum’s shift to Proof of Stake can’t come quickly enough. At least then a graphics card might actually become a graphics card again, and not a mining card.

Chris Szewczyk
Hardware Writer

Chris' gaming experiences go back to the mid-nineties when he conned his parents into buying an 'educational PC' that was conveniently overpowered to play Doom and Tie Fighter. He developed a love of extreme overclocking that destroyed his savings despite the cheaper hardware on offer via his job at a PC store. To afford more LN2 he began moonlighting as a reviewer for VR-Zone before jumping the fence to work for MSI Australia. Since then, he's gone back to journalism, enthusiastically reviewing the latest and greatest components for PC & Tech Authority, PC Powerplay and currently Australian Personal Computer magazine and PC Gamer. Chris still puts far too many hours into Borderlands 3, always striving to become a more efficient killer.

Read more
Steam logo
A web3 free-to-play survival game found to be a front for installing malware on your PC has finally been removed from Steam
A rendered concept image of an imaginary real Bitcoin against a stylized digital/electronic background
Bitcoin hits a new all-time high, $Trump is stymied by $Melania, and I'm over here having a full-blown existential crisis
4 November 2019; Edward Snowden, President, Freedom of the Press Foundation, on Centre Stage during the opening night of Web Summit 2019 at the Altice Arena in Lisbon, Portugal.
NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden slams Nvidia RTX 5080 as 'a monopolistic crime against the consumer'
Hacker
$1.5 billion crypto heist could be the biggest yet, more than doubling the previous record, but don't worry: The affected firm says it can take the hit
MSI RTX 5070 Ti Gaming Trio OC Plus graphics card under a red light
The price gouging of Nvidia's RTX 5070 Ti is utterly grotesque
 In this photo illustration a novelty Bitcoin token is photographed on a US Dollar bank note, on January 4, 2025 in Bath, England. The Cryptocurrency market has recently received a significant boost by the election of Donald Trump with hopes of the start of a policy framework that could see Bitcoin as a strategic asset
Man charged with $65,000,000 worth of cryptocurrency heists was reportedly discovered through chatting on Discord with a company they allegedly stole from
Latest in Hardware
A photo of Nvidia's Zorah graphics demo running a large gaming monitor
Nvidia's expanded Zorah demo tells us how AI is the future of graphics: 'There's no rasterization going on at all. This is all ray traced and the amazing part is that it's actually faster than rasterizing'
A photograph of the opening slide of a Microsoft lecture on Cooperative Vectors at GDC 2025
AMD, Intel, Microsoft, and Nvidia are all excited about cooperative vectors and what they mean for the future of 3D graphics, but it's going to be a good while before we really see their impact
Machinery tools and equipment,Rolls of galvanized steel for production metal pipes and tubes for industrial ventilation systems in factory.
New super-thin '2D' metal sheets could enable ultra-low power chips and can you guess how they're made? Yup, by squishing stuff really hard
A screenshot from the Silent Hill F reveal trailer, showing a Japanese girl in a school uniform next to a truck
The Silent Hill F system requirements look pretty modest at first but that's only for all my 720p gamers out there
Endorfy Fortis 5 air cooler on a desk and loaded onto a motherboard.
Endorfy Fortis 5 Dual Fan review
A collage of Radeon RX 9000 series graphics cards, as shown in AMD's promotional video for the launch of RDNA 4 at CES 2025
AMD claims it has 45% gaming GPU market share in Japan but jokingly admits it 'isn't used to selling graphics cards'
Latest in News
Inzoi - A character with a long bob in the character creator
Inzoi will cost as much as a Sims 4 expansion pack and until it leaves early access 'all DLCs and updates will be free'
Inzoi -
In good news for Sim-murdering sickos, Inzoi has '16 different types of deaths'
A photo of Nvidia's Zorah graphics demo running a large gaming monitor
Nvidia's expanded Zorah demo tells us how AI is the future of graphics: 'There's no rasterization going on at all. This is all ray traced and the amazing part is that it's actually faster than rasterizing'
Ghoul in sunglasses
After years of playing as stupid, boring humans in Fallout, you can finally channel your inner Walton Goggins and become a ghoul in Fallout 76
Astarion, after being asked whether he'd like a kiss, winces in the opposite of anticipation in Baldur's Gate 3.
Hasbro will be ready to share news about the future of Baldur's Gate 'in pretty short order'
WoW Classic: Season of Discovery
World of Warcraft Classic’s Season of Discovery may be teasing a legendary weapon that players have speculated is in the game for two decades