Well I use Norton AV for the Mac:

http://www.symantec.com/nav/nav_mac/index.html

But that's because it's provided free by the company's IS department,
not because I did any kind of careful market analysis to find the best
anti-virus package. 

I'm afraid I don't know how it performs under Panther as my two Macs at
home still run Jaguar.  It's fine on Jaguar, though every time I dock
the iPod Norton AV tries to scan it for viruses.  Luckily you can cancel
the scan but still, it's annoying.

--- Rex.


-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:owner-macgroup at erdos.math.louisville.edu] On Behalf Of J. Blake
Sent: Tuesday, May 11, 2004 4:10 PM
To: macgroup at erdos.math.louisville.edu
Subject: Re: MacGroup: FW: you've been laughing too long at the Window's
users


Rex sent out this message back in April, and I think it's important to  
take note.

So....I'm asking again about virus protection software for the Mac.

Which ones are safe and effective to use with Panther?

I have Norton System Works, but I heard it could cause trouble. Is this

true?

My new router provides a lot of protection. The built-in firewall in OS

X does too. But, I still want to know if, in light of this article, you

all think we may need more protection than even that.

And, if so, what kind of software do you recommend?

And, yes, I know.......backup, backup, backup...smile

TIA,

Jane

On Apr 9, 2004, at 8:17 AM, Rex Baldazo wrote:

> Got this email below from a friend at work.  It's a good reminder that

> the Mac is not in fact immune to viruses.  It's just that so far 
> nobody has really spent a lot of effort making a good Mac virus, all 
> the hackers are focused on Windows.
>
> The news about this Mac virus also got posted to a couple other sites:
>
> http://www.techtv.com/screensavers/answerstips/story/
> 0,24330,3664271,00.
> html
> http://arstechnica.com/news/posts/1081455881.html
>
> --- Rex.
>
>
> -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
> Hash: SHA1
>
> Mac Os's first trojan...
>
> http://www.intego.com/news/pr40.html
>
>
> The Trojan horse's code is encapsulated in the ID3 tag of an MP3 
> (digital  music) file. This code is in reality a hidden application 
> that can run  on any Macintosh computer running Mac OS X.
>
> Mac OS X displays the icon of the MP3 file, with an .mp3 extension, 
> rather than showing the file as an application, leading users to 
> believe  that they can double-click the file to listen to it. But 
> double clicking  the file launches the hidden code, which can damage 
> or delete files on  computers running Mac OS X, then iTunes to play 
> the music contained in  the file, to make users think that it is 
> really an MP3 file . While the  first versions of this Trojan horse 
> that Intego has isolated are benign,  this technique opens the door to

> more serious risks.
>
>
> - --Ian
>
> - --
> Ian Holsman
> Director
> Network Management Systems
> CNET Networks
> PH: 415-344-2608 (USA) /(++61) 3-9857-3742 (Australia) -----BEGIN PGP
> SIGNATURE-----
> Version: GnuPG v1.2.4 (Darwin)
>
> iD8DBQFAdc2Kq3pgvCz4ZCcRAvuVAJ9OolnbCCXlwKhajiPXsWZ9yrFGFgCeI54n
> uSf3X24XkJTIm4hHCncP6EA=
> =fgh9
> -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
>
>
>
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