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Thread: Apple and malware

  1. #1
    tony@well.com Guest

    Apple and malware

    As I think I understand it, Apple computers are not vulnerable to the
    spy/malware discussed here, because they do not use a Windows
    operating system. Is this legend or is it fact?

    T.
    ========================
    Tony Roder, speaking his mind....

  2. #2
    tony@well.com Guest

    Re: Apple and malware

    On Fri, 29 Aug 2003 18:12:32 GMT, null@zilch.com wrote:

    >You may be interested in this document which lists quite a number of
    >(old) Macintosh viruses:
    >
    >http://www.faqs.org/faqs/computer-virus/macintosh-faq/


    Informative, yes... My question was prompted by the realization that
    I/we spend a fair amount of time thrashing about to protect our
    investment (time, development, money) in the Windows system, and in my
    specific case, by trying to decide whether to install the more
    vulnerable XP over the fussy W98 -- not to mention selling my soul to
    MS in the process, or whether to simply stop throw in what looks
    increasingly as a bad hand and go play another game. Along with the
    Mac, Linux for instance looks more and more attractive despite the
    learning curve they would entail.

    T.
    ========================
    Tony Roder, speaking his mind....

  3. #3
    null@zilch.com Guest

    Re: Apple and malware

    On Sat, 30 Aug 2003 17:43:23 GMT, tony@well.com wrote:

    >On Fri, 29 Aug 2003 18:12:32 GMT, null@zilch.com wrote:
    >
    >>You may be interested in this document which lists quite a number of
    >>(old) Macintosh viruses:
    >>
    >>http://www.faqs.org/faqs/computer-virus/macintosh-faq/

    >
    >Informative, yes... My question was prompted by the realization that
    >I/we spend a fair amount of time thrashing about to protect our
    >investment (time, development, money) in the Windows system, and in my
    >specific case, by trying to decide whether to install the more
    >vulnerable XP over the fussy W98 -- not to mention selling my soul to
    >MS in the process, or whether to simply stop throw in what looks
    >increasingly as a bad hand and go play another game. Along with the
    >Mac, Linux for instance looks more and more attractive despite the
    >learning curve they would entail.


    The main problem is the use of Microsoft apps for email, newsgroups
    and browsing. I use Pegasus, Free Agent and Mozilla. I used Win 98 for
    four years and have no complaints. Now I'm using Win ME and have no
    complaints about it either. It's so much easier to take care of the
    network situation for a stand-alone and close all internet ports on
    Win 9x/ME. I like to use just DOS antivirus scanners so I'm not
    attracted at all to NTFS. IMO, M$ has made the actual security
    situation .... the kind that matters .... much worse rather than
    better after Win ME IMO.


    Art
    http://www.epix.net/~artnpeg

  4. #4
    tony@well.com Guest

    Re: Apple and malware

    On Sat, 30 Aug 2003 1804 GMT, null@zilch.com wrote:

    >The main problem is the use of Microsoft apps for email, newsgroups
    >and browsing.


    A good point, also championed by Blocksom, and perhaps a simpler
    solution than switching to another OS.

    >It's so much easier to take care of the
    >network situation for a stand-alone and close all internet ports on
    >Win 9x/ME.


    I'm not sure I understand how to close internet ports and still read
    the Web, particularly in XP -- which would the only reasonable upgrade
    from W98 at this point, given that all the intermediate OSs (ME,
    2000,...) have now been removed from the store shelves.

    T.
    ========================
    Tony Roder, speaking his mind....

  5. #5
    null@zilch.com Guest

    Re: Apple and malware

    On Sat, 30 Aug 2003 22:12:50 GMT, tony@well.com wrote:

    >On Sat, 30 Aug 2003 1804 GMT, null@zilch.com wrote:
    >
    >>The main problem is the use of Microsoft apps for email, newsgroups
    >>and browsing.

    >
    >A good point, also championed by Blocksom, and perhaps a simpler
    >solution than switching to another OS.
    >
    >>It's so much easier to take care of the
    >>network situation for a stand-alone and close all internet ports on
    >>Win 9x/ME.

    >
    >I'm not sure I understand how to close internet ports and still read
    >the Web, particularly in XP -- which would the only reasonable upgrade
    >from W98 at this point, given that all the intermediate OSs (ME,
    >2000,...) have now been removed from the store shelves.


    It's not difficult with Win 9x/ME. I've put up a page on it for
    stand-alone PC users:

    http://home.epix.net/%7Eartnpeg/internet.html

    It's far more difficult with Win 2K and XP. Most throw up their hands
    and use a firewall.

    Anyway, I recently got a steal on a used Hp Pavilion with a 900 mhz
    PIII and Win ME install CDs. I'm hoping this PC will hold me for
    several years. It's important to install the OS patches which M$ still
    supports for Win ME. And use a cloned hard drive on a removable tray
    as backup. And make damn sure you aren't backing up malicous code


    Art
    http://www.epix.net/~artnpeg

  6. #6
    mto Guest

    Re: Apple and malware


    <tony@well.com> wrote in message
    news:n6o1lvkvldlv9es3jot23ldjq08rofb11q@4ax.com...
    > On Fri, 29 Aug 2003 18:12:32 GMT, null@zilch.com wrote:
    >
    > >You may be interested in this document which lists quite a number of
    > >(old) Macintosh viruses:
    > >
    > >http://www.faqs.org/faqs/computer-virus/macintosh-faq/

    >
    > Informative, yes... My question was prompted by the realization that
    > I/we spend a fair amount of time thrashing about to protect our
    > investment (time, development, money) in the Windows system, and in my
    > specific case, by trying to decide whether to install the more
    > vulnerable XP over the fussy W98 -- not to mention selling my soul to
    > MS in the process, or whether to simply stop throw in what looks
    > increasingly as a bad hand and go play another game. Along with the
    > Mac, Linux for instance looks more and more attractive despite the
    > learning curve they would entail.


    Gotta tell you Tony, I would cheerfully take a Mac over this XP system any
    day in the week. Cut my teeth long, long ago on VAX, PC and Mac running a
    college computer lab. When I started my own business and had to purchase a
    computer I went with a PC because of the cost difference - hundreds back
    then. These days the difference isn't all that much, but now I have
    thousands invested in software Adobe anything doesn't come cheap and I
    don't want to replace it.

    We have a Linux box rolling around the house. The learning curve wasn't all
    that great - the 6 year old managed to find herself a comfort zone within a
    couple of days. If you're using any kind of highly specialized software,
    though, finding what you need for Linux can still be tough. (Graphics,
    scientific, that kind of thing.) The learning curve for a Mac is close to
    zilch - nearly everything you see now as Windows started life as Mac back
    when MS products came in green on black.

    From everything I've seen/heard it looks like MS intends in the long (or
    maybe not so long) run to move most programming to a situation where you use
    software from a centralized network and pay annual subscriptions to do so
    rather than having a copy on your own machine. What happens then to my very
    expensive software I don't want to have to buy again anytime soon? And is
    it really worth it to me to pay out a couple of hundred or more bucks a year
    to type a few - or even a few hundred - documents & use the internet?
    (Probably not.) Windows is spendy, getting spendier and never was anything
    more than a bad - and very slow - copy of the Mac OS.



  7. #7
    tony@well.com Guest

    Re: Apple and malware

    On Sat, 30 Aug 2003 21:13:48 -0400, "mto"
    <nobody@dontsendmeanyspam.thanks> wrote:

    >Gotta tell you Tony, I would cheerfully take a Mac over this XP system any
    >day in the week.


    Encouraging words...

    >but now I have
    >thousands invested in software Adobe anything doesn't come cheap and I
    >don't want to replace it.


    Same here, but you have just inspired an idea: I wonder whether Adobe
    would be interested in cutting some slack to people who switch OSs as
    a consideration for their loyalty to the Adobe product.

    >We have a Linux box rolling around the house. The learning curve wasn't all
    >that great - the 6 year old managed to find herself a comfort zone within a
    >couple of days.


    Easy for a 6-year-old, they are a clean slate, harder (much harder?)
    for someone who is orders-of-magnitude-more-year-old.

    >If you're using any kind of highly specialized software,
    >though


    Aye, there's the rub.

    T.
    ========================
    Tony Roder, speaking his mind....

  8. #8
    mto Guest

    Re: Apple and malware


    <tony@well.com> wrote in message
    news:4i24lvcio0gfmfjrkn2hri0kp86ern0lf4@4ax.com...
    > On Sat, 30 Aug 2003 21:13:48 -0400, "mto"
    > <nobody@dontsendmeanyspam.thanks> wrote:
    >
    > >Gotta tell you Tony, I would cheerfully take a Mac over this XP system

    any
    > >day in the week.

    >
    > Encouraging words...
    >
    > >but now I have
    > >thousands invested in software Adobe anything doesn't come cheap and

    I
    > >don't want to replace it.

    >
    > Same here, but you have just inspired an idea: I wonder whether Adobe
    > would be interested in cutting some slack to people who switch OSs as
    > a consideration for their loyalty to the Adobe product.
    >
    > >We have a Linux box rolling around the house. The learning curve wasn't

    all
    > >that great - the 6 year old managed to find herself a comfort zone within

    a
    > >couple of days.

    >
    > Easy for a 6-year-old, they are a clean slate, harder (much harder?)
    > for someone who is orders-of-magnitude-more-year-old.


    The six year old started playing with the computer age 0.5 sitting on my
    left knee ROFL. She's a wiz at computer graphics, has figured out how to
    type now that she can spell and has her very own internet start page
    (courtesy of you-know-who, favorite kid safe sites only.) She wants her own
    email account - NOT - and has been bugging me for a week straight now to
    teach her to use Illustrator. Says Paint "doesn't do enough" ROFLMAO.
    She'll be better than I am with it in a month flat. Mindblowing.

    Seriously, though, if you can take one of them for a walk around the block,
    you can manage just fine. Not too much harder than for the 6-year-old. Her
    main advantage is that she doesn't know it is supposed to be "hard" - thinks
    it is a game, right up there with puzzles, blocks, Playstation and Barbie.





  9. #9
    tony@well.com Guest

    Re: Apple and malware

    On Sun, 31 Aug 2003 15:09:56 -0400, "mto"
    <nobody@dontsendmeanyspam.thanks> wrote:

    >Seriously, though, if you can take one of them for a walk around the block,
    >you can manage just fine.


    I'm sure I can, as long as I can suspend disbelief... I remember
    enjoying computers from pre-PC days and I probably can still bring
    myself to look upon them as fun...

    T.

    ========================
    Tony Roder, speaking his mind....

  10. #10
    Davoud Guest

    Re: Apple and malware

    <tony@well.com> wrote:
    > As I think I understand it, Apple computers are not vulnerable to the
    > spy/malware discussed here, because they do not use a Windows
    > operating system. Is this legend or is it fact?>


    *****

    It's a fact. No spyware, no current viruses/worms/what have you. It's
    quite a coincidence that your post should catch my eye on my first
    visit to this NG. I'm a Mac user -- six of 'em -- who recently bought a
    Win XP Pro laptop (Sony Vaio) to run specific software. (I'm a
    webmaster, and I've been running Win 98 on a Mac with Virtual PC for
    some years in order to do an occasional check of my web pages with
    Explorer for Windows).

    I used to call Windows a cheap imitation of the Mac OS, but I didn't
    really know what I was talking about -- Win XP Pro isn't nearly good
    enough to be called a cheap imitation of the Mac OS!

    So what brought me to this NG? I've never run into spyware before, and
    now something is causing eZula to be downloaded to my Vaio. I have a
    detector/deleter, but I'm trying to find what is causing it to be
    downloaded repeatedly.

    Davoud

    Mac U.S. market share (all machines in use): about 5 percent.
    *Combined* U.S. market share of BMW, Mercedes, Volvo, Audi, Jaguar,
    Saab, and Porsche: about 4.3 percent.

    --
    usenet *at* davidillig dawt com

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