Good for them!
On Jul 8, 2006, at 5:41 PM, Dane Trethowan wrote:
I really shouldn't be so negative about a company as we're in a
free society and business should be encouraged but not the way
Microsoft treats the word business, that's definately out and if
Apple treated their customers and clients with the same comtempt as
we're seeing from Microsoft then I'd be down on them like a tonne
of bricks too. Let's face it, Apple made a new operating system
and designed it from the ground up (I'm talking about OS10 of
course) and as we all know, its based on a form of LINUX which is
more secure than the way the Windows operating system is written
which is a many layered operating system. Now the question is, if
Apple can do this then why not Microsoft? If they did this then it
would be a great leap forward and many of the security issues would
be neutralised.
as a final footnote to this, I do a little work in the charity
feeld and I know that many of them are using LINUX systems or Mac
as they do not have the restrictions or costs associated with
Microsoft and the products from that company.
On 09/07/2006, at 3:38 AM, Tom McMahan wrote:
I wonder where they've been?
That was one of my selling points to my wife when we were thinking
about buying a new computer over 3 years ago. And I don't consider
myself that smart, which points back to my original question above.
On Jul 8, 2006, at 8:56 AM, Dane Trethowan wrote:
You have to wonder just how much money Microsoft may be making out
of all this <smile> I won't go on about it as its off-topic a
little but I read an article in a Technology bulletin this morning
which talked about how someone had written some Malicious code
which replaced the Microsoft Genuine Advantage pthing for Windows
XP, well all I can say is rubb salt into Microsofts wounds Nice,
good and propper <smile>.
On 08/07/2006, at 11:56 AM, LARRY WANGER wrote:
Check this out.
Security Company Recommends Macs
By Walaika K. Haskins
July 5, 2006 3:30PM
"There are far, far fewer threats on Apple Macs than there are on
PCs," said Graham Cluley, senior technology consultant at Sophos.
"So home users who
simply want a computer to do some Web surfing, exchange e-mails,
take photographs, buy music, or make movies may find it's a much
simpler life from the
malware point of view if they used a Mac instead of a PC."
A new breed of malicious software has replaced viruses and worms
as the weapon of choice for Internet criminals looking to steal
money from unsuspecting
netizens, according to a study published Wednesday by security
firm Sophos.
The report found that during the first half of 2006, the number of
new worms and viruses emerging on the Internet dropped
significantly, overshadowed by
a new, dangerous species of Trojan horse. These Trojans, according
to Sophos, now outnumber other new viruses and worms by a four-to-
one margin.
In light of all the new malicious software targeting Windows PCs,
Sophos recommended in the report that Windows users swap their
current systems for a Mac.
Making the switch to a Mac, the company said, will help safeguard
against the new breed of attacks.
"Because there are so many poorly protected home computers out
there running Windows, the hackers haven't had to write Mac
versions of their viruses," said
Graham Cluely, senior technology consultant at Sophos.
Trojans on the Rise
Last month, Sophos identified 180,292 different types of malicious
code actively circulating on the Internet, representing an
increase of more than 40,000
over June 2005. The bulk of these ne'er-do-well programs are
written to target Windows users.
"The criminals responsible are obviously making money from their
code, otherwise they'd give up the game," Cluley said.
During the first six months of 2006, Trojans accounted for some 82
percent of new threats. Hackers prefer this type of malicious
software, Sophos found,
because it can be targeted at a particular group of people to
increase the likelihood of tricking users into handing over
information.
Unlike the old days of computer viruses when hackers wrote and
released their malware in a quest to grab headlines and impress
their peers, today's malicious
code writers want as little publicity as possible, Cluley noted.
"If a virus makes the front page of the New York Times, that's bad
news for today's hackers," he said. "They don't want users to be
aware of what they're
up to, so they like to infect a smaller group of people and steal
from them (identities, bank account information, and so forth)
without them realizing
that they have been infected at all."
Choose a Mac
Cluley said that, after years of recommending that users take
steps to better protect their computers with constantly updating
security software, it is
clear that most users are not listening.
"Every antivirus program on the planet detects [the older
viruses], but clearly some PC home users aren't running any
effective antivirus [software] at
all or haven't bothered updating it," Cluley said. "So why not
switch to a computer which simply cannot be infected by these
threats?"
The Sophos report indicated that the first malicious software
targeting Apple's Mac OS X did not emerge until February 2006. The
company also found that,
in contrast to predictions from the SANS Institute and other
security companies, there has been no deluge of viruses targeting
the Mac.
Odds are, Cluley predicted, that Macs will "continue to be the
safer place for computer users" for some time to come.
"There are far, far fewer threats on Apple Macs than there are on
PCs," he said. "So home users who simply want a computer to do
some Web surfing, exchange
e-mails, take photographs, buy music, or make movies may find it's
a much simpler life from the malware point of view if they used a
Mac instead of a PC."
Visit my home page at http://www.disabilitynation.net and
subscribe to The DisabilityNation Podcast.