comp.sys.mac.advocacy wrote:From: zurg <zurg@fakeaddress.com>
Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac.advocacy
Message-ID: <100420041533340581%zurg@fakeaddress.com>
User-Agent: Thoth/1.5.9 (Carbon/OS X)
Organization: Comcast Online
Date: Sat, 10 Apr 2004 22:33:35 GMT
In article <4077ada4$1_1@127.0.0.1>, Super Spinner <someone@noplace.com> wrote:
> So, since December 2003 I've installed six Mac OS X Security Updates vs five
> Windows XP Security/Critical Updates. It doesn't look like either OS has a
> security advantage over the other. If Macs were as popular as Windows, and
> therefore were as large a target of attacks, there's little evidence that
> Macs would be any less vulnerable than Windows. Macs are more "secure"
> because nobody targets them, pure and simple. Security via obscurity. ] Apache web server? The latter is in much bigger
market than the former and yet it's the *one with the smaller market*
that has more security issues and viruses. Why doesn't Apache outpace
IIS with security issues? Isn't it clear that MS produces incredibly
shoddy software? Why is this so difficult to accept?
Bear in mind also that most of the security issues typically corrected
by Apple involve the open source software that ships with Darwin. There
are countless Unix/Linux boxes out there along with OS X machines
running these things and that greatly [increases] the number of machines
available for being exploited. When an SSH vulnerability is found, all
those machines are open to attack, not just OS X. When you talk of OS X
security issues, you're talking about *nix security issues and that's a
much bigger platform, all combined, than Mac alone.
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