Blockchain technology adds transparency and openness to the user-antivirus relationship.
As a rule of thumb, a user doesn’t know how a virus got to their computer, what the cause was and how the attack was repelled. All the data is recorded in the antivirus database that is, in fact, not accessible. It causes suspicions that antivirus software companies create viruses to have some “work to do.”
In our case, the data is written on the blockchain. After repelling an attack, a record containing a hash from the virus file, the virus type, the time of the attack, and etc. is created. The information is written on the blockchain, which is publicly accessible and can be verified by anyone.