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Forums - Microsoft - Hacker: Microsoft More Secure Than Apple, Adobe

Security against hackers is one thing. Security against a dumb user is another. I support computers all the time and probably the main cause of Windows performance and break downs is the ignorance of the user. In the case of Windows, with all the crap that people install, it just seems to break down. People typically do "typical" installs resulting in all sorts of crap getting on their PC. Unwanted browser toolbars etc etc. Furthermore, over a long period of time with use, the good old Registry files just bloat, impact on performance. I really do dislike the idea of a registry file, a file that is just a mother of all INI file but in a binary format :). If the registry gets out of jam it becomes a question of, do I clean it up or do I just reinstall the whole damn O/S. Cleaning it up becomes a task of frustration. I swear it seems to be there for inherent DRM enforcement more than anything. Remember how easy it was to move/copy a DOS game?

Now I am no Mac advocate, no Mac master, but I have been playing with PC's since my first Commodore 64. I just find the registry file a big bloody annoyance. When I was enforced to use Windows it was originally Win 3.1 and then came Win95 with that bloody registry paradigm. I do get the potential benefits of the idea but at the same time I can see more bad reasons to have such a design rather than good ones.



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kowenicki said:
Mvp4eVa said:
I would love to have a MAC with windows on them..

I like their hardware design (keyboard/monitors) but thats about it.


then why dont you... it isnt difficult.

 

It isn't even against the Apple ToS (I think it used to be)

 

Buy a Mac

Buy a copy of whichever windows you want to use

Run bootcamp, which is preinstalled on your mac

Install windows

???

Profit



scottie said:
r505Matt said:
scottie said:
Kenoid said:

 

Security is a state of being, not something situational. You can't just change up the variables just to suit your purpose, you have to keep consistencies or there's no point. So a well locked bankvault which people know to contain billions or a fairly poorly locked bankvault which people know to contain billions of dollars. There's a difference in 1 variable, not 2. 

A well built castle defending a vital point or a poorly built castle defending a vital point. Again, the only different there is a variable in security. Otherwise you an say whatever you want to suit any purpose, and has no bearing on validity, and doesn't contribute to a discussion.

The fact of the matter is that Windows suffers repeated continuous attacks at all times, whereas Mac OSX doesnt. However you interpret that is up to you. As someone put it, MS has gone through a trial by fire, and has come out stronger and better for it. If Apple were hit by the same force, I'd imagine their security could fall apart.

 

But in the Mac/Pc debate there are two variables - you make a lot more money from kacing PC's than you do macs, because more people use them. So thanks for admitting my comparison is perfect :)

 

And this is why I said that you would be better off reading my first post properly

 

"2) Whatever the reason, Mac is more secure. This guy, as a computer hacker, defines security purely in terms of the strength of the code. I would define security in terms of how much threat viruses pose to your system. A bad castle in the bronze age is more secure than a good castle in modern times. However, it's not a hugely important point, because neither definition is inherently right, and really it comes down to semantics."

which castle would you rather be in during an attack lol the highly secure one or the one with one old half bind sentry and an unlocked door. yes you are far less likely to be attacked but if you are you have less protection, I know mac users that use no security software at all because they think like you do but they are far more likely to have a keylogger steal their credit card info than someone that has a windows machine with a firewall and antivirus/antispyware software who checks to make sure that the sites they enter that data into is secure etc. My point is there are mac viruses and keyloggers etc for the mac infact they are on the rise but as people think they don't have to worry about it because they have a mac they are far less secure.



@TheVoxelman on twitter

Check out my hype threads: Cyberpunk, and The Witcher 3!

zarx said:
scottie said:
r505Matt said:
scottie said:
Kenoid said:

 

Security is a state of being, not something situational. You can't just change up the variables just to suit your purpose, you have to keep consistencies or there's no point. So a well locked bankvault which people know to contain billions or a fairly poorly locked bankvault which people know to contain billions of dollars. There's a difference in 1 variable, not 2. 

A well built castle defending a vital point or a poorly built castle defending a vital point. Again, the only different there is a variable in security. Otherwise you an say whatever you want to suit any purpose, and has no bearing on validity, and doesn't contribute to a discussion.

The fact of the matter is that Windows suffers repeated continuous attacks at all times, whereas Mac OSX doesnt. However you interpret that is up to you. As someone put it, MS has gone through a trial by fire, and has come out stronger and better for it. If Apple were hit by the same force, I'd imagine their security could fall apart.

 

But in the Mac/Pc debate there are two variables - you make a lot more money from kacing PC's than you do macs, because more people use them. So thanks for admitting my comparison is perfect :)

 

And this is why I said that you would be better off reading my first post properly

 

"2) Whatever the reason, Mac is more secure. This guy, as a computer hacker, defines security purely in terms of the strength of the code. I would define security in terms of how much threat viruses pose to your system. A bad castle in the bronze age is more secure than a good castle in modern times. However, it's not a hugely important point, because neither definition is inherently right, and really it comes down to semantics."

which castle would you rather be in during an attack lol the highly secure one or the one with one old half bind sentry and an unlocked door. yes you are far less likely to be attacked but if you are you have less protection, I know mac users that use no security software at all because they think like you do but they are far more likely to have a keylogger steal their credit card info than someone that has a windows machine with a firewall and antivirus/antispyware software who checks to make sure that the sites they enter that data into is secure etc. My point is there are mac viruses and keyloggers etc for the mac infact they are on the rise but as people think they don't have to worry about it because they have a mac they are far less secure.

 

Well yes, I am willing to admit that in the particular situation of a smart windows user who is currently experiencing an attack is going to have less negative consequences than an equally intelligent Mac user who is currently experiencing a threat of equal magnitude. That is infact exactly what the hacker said in the OP and I did not disagree with this.

 

I have stated many times that my definition of secure includes the likelihood of experiencing an attack, while acknowledging that yours is purely based on a theoretical "Whose code is better" perspective - what I might refer to as inherent security I suppose, and that neither of these is objectively correct.

 

And yes, the 'security through obscurity' that Mac users enjoy is starting to wear off, mostly because the mac userbase is growing (both in terms of install base and market share), making Macking (Mac Hacking) a more profitable venture. However, I am also of the opinion that Apple is currently developing their antivirus protection at a rate more then able to offset the aforementioned decline. Apple has started officially spreading the word that antivirus software is still essential for a mac user, and the inherent security of their programs is improving



scottie said:
zarx said:
scottie said:
r505Matt said:
scottie said:
Kenoid said:

 

Security is a state of being, not something situational. You can't just change up the variables just to suit your purpose, you have to keep consistencies or there's no point. So a well locked bankvault which people know to contain billions or a fairly poorly locked bankvault which people know to contain billions of dollars. There's a difference in 1 variable, not 2. 

A well built castle defending a vital point or a poorly built castle defending a vital point. Again, the only different there is a variable in security. Otherwise you an say whatever you want to suit any purpose, and has no bearing on validity, and doesn't contribute to a discussion.

The fact of the matter is that Windows suffers repeated continuous attacks at all times, whereas Mac OSX doesnt. However you interpret that is up to you. As someone put it, MS has gone through a trial by fire, and has come out stronger and better for it. If Apple were hit by the same force, I'd imagine their security could fall apart.

 

But in the Mac/Pc debate there are two variables - you make a lot more money from kacing PC's than you do macs, because more people use them. So thanks for admitting my comparison is perfect :)

 

And this is why I said that you would be better off reading my first post properly

 

"2) Whatever the reason, Mac is more secure. This guy, as a computer hacker, defines security purely in terms of the strength of the code. I would define security in terms of how much threat viruses pose to your system. A bad castle in the bronze age is more secure than a good castle in modern times. However, it's not a hugely important point, because neither definition is inherently right, and really it comes down to semantics."

which castle would you rather be in during an attack lol the highly secure one or the one with one old half bind sentry and an unlocked door. yes you are far less likely to be attacked but if you are you have less protection, I know mac users that use no security software at all because they think like you do but they are far more likely to have a keylogger steal their credit card info than someone that has a windows machine with a firewall and antivirus/antispyware software who checks to make sure that the sites they enter that data into is secure etc. My point is there are mac viruses and keyloggers etc for the mac infact they are on the rise but as people think they don't have to worry about it because they have a mac they are far less secure.

 

Well yes, I am willing to admit that in the particular situation of a smart windows user who is currently experiencing an attack is going to have less negative consequences than an equally intelligent Mac user who is currently experiencing a threat of equal magnitude. That is infact exactly what the hacker said in the OP and I did not disagree with this.

 

I have stated many times that my definition of secure includes the likelihood of experiencing an attack, while acknowledging that yours is purely based on a theoretical "Whose code is better" perspective - what I might refer to as inherent security I suppose, and that neither of these is objectively correct.

 

And yes, the 'security through obscurity' that Mac users enjoy is starting to wear off, mostly because the mac userbase is growing (both in terms of install base and market share), making Macking (Mac Hacking) a more profitable venture. However, I am also of the opinion that Apple is currently developing their antivirus protection at a rate more then able to offset the aforementioned decline. Apple has started officially spreading the word that antivirus software is still essential for a mac user, and the inherent security of their programs is improving

That is still not fixing the significant number of security holes in their software that have been present ever since the switch to OSX.  They really aren't taking their security as seriously as they should, for them to have more identified security issues than Microsoft is crazy.



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scottie said:
zarx said:
scottie said:
r505Matt said:
scottie said:
Kenoid said:

 

Security is a state of being, not something situational. You can't just change up the variables just to suit your purpose, you have to keep consistencies or there's no point. So a well locked bankvault which people know to contain billions or a fairly poorly locked bankvault which people know to contain billions of dollars. There's a difference in 1 variable, not 2. 

A well built castle defending a vital point or a poorly built castle defending a vital point. Again, the only different there is a variable in security. Otherwise you an say whatever you want to suit any purpose, and has no bearing on validity, and doesn't contribute to a discussion.

The fact of the matter is that Windows suffers repeated continuous attacks at all times, whereas Mac OSX doesnt. However you interpret that is up to you. As someone put it, MS has gone through a trial by fire, and has come out stronger and better for it. If Apple were hit by the same force, I'd imagine their security could fall apart.

 

But in the Mac/Pc debate there are two variables - you make a lot more money from kacing PC's than you do macs, because more people use them. So thanks for admitting my comparison is perfect :)

 

And this is why I said that you would be better off reading my first post properly

 

"2) Whatever the reason, Mac is more secure. This guy, as a computer hacker, defines security purely in terms of the strength of the code. I would define security in terms of how much threat viruses pose to your system. A bad castle in the bronze age is more secure than a good castle in modern times. However, it's not a hugely important point, because neither definition is inherently right, and really it comes down to semantics."

which castle would you rather be in during an attack lol the highly secure one or the one with one old half bind sentry and an unlocked door. yes you are far less likely to be attacked but if you are you have less protection, I know mac users that use no security software at all because they think like you do but they are far more likely to have a keylogger steal their credit card info than someone that has a windows machine with a firewall and antivirus/antispyware software who checks to make sure that the sites they enter that data into is secure etc. My point is there are mac viruses and keyloggers etc for the mac infact they are on the rise but as people think they don't have to worry about it because they have a mac they are far less secure.

 

Well yes, I am willing to admit that in the particular situation of a smart windows user who is currently experiencing an attack is going to have less negative consequences than an equally intelligent Mac user who is currently experiencing a threat of equal magnitude. That is infact exactly what the hacker said in the OP and I did not disagree with this.

 

I have stated many times that my definition of secure includes the likelihood of experiencing an attack, while acknowledging that yours is purely based on a theoretical "Whose code is better" perspective - what I might refer to as inherent security I suppose, and that neither of these is objectively correct.

 

And yes, the 'security through obscurity' that Mac users enjoy is starting to wear off, mostly because the mac userbase is growing (both in terms of install base and market share), making Macking (Mac Hacking) a more profitable venture. However, I am also of the opinion that Apple is currently developing their antivirus protection at a rate more then able to offset the aforementioned decline. Apple has started officially spreading the word that antivirus software is still essential for a mac user, and the inherent security of their programs is improving

fair enough I guess but I would still prefer to be prepared myself it only takes one successful attack for you identity/money to be stolen, and a well protected (firewall antivirus etc) windows system is more secure than just running a Mac. I have read reports that malware writers are starting to attack more Mac OS and multi platform apps like Acrobat, Flash and web browsers as they are softer targets, it's good that Apple are starting to consider security more but if their userbase keeps growing and windows systems are kkep getting harder to exploit I think there will be an exponential increase in the amount of malware that targets apple systems and I think Apple could be more proactive in securing their systems they have hidden behind obscurity for to long.



@TheVoxelman on twitter

Check out my hype threads: Cyberpunk, and The Witcher 3!

slowmo said:
scottie said:
zarx said:
scottie said:
r505Matt said:
scottie said:
Kenoid said:

 

Security is a state of being, not something situational. You can't just change up the variables just to suit your purpose, you have to keep consistencies or there's no point. So a well locked bankvault which people know to contain billions or a fairly poorly locked bankvault which people know to contain billions of dollars. There's a difference in 1 variable, not 2. 

A well built castle defending a vital point or a poorly built castle defending a vital point. Again, the only different there is a variable in security. Otherwise you an say whatever you want to suit any purpose, and has no bearing on validity, and doesn't contribute to a discussion.

The fact of the matter is that Windows suffers repeated continuous attacks at all times, whereas Mac OSX doesnt. However you interpret that is up to you. As someone put it, MS has gone through a trial by fire, and has come out stronger and better for it. If Apple were hit by the same force, I'd imagine their security could fall apart.

 

But in the Mac/Pc debate there are two variables - you make a lot more money from kacing PC's than you do macs, because more people use them. So thanks for admitting my comparison is perfect :)

 

And this is why I said that you would be better off reading my first post properly

 

"2) Whatever the reason, Mac is more secure. This guy, as a computer hacker, defines security purely in terms of the strength of the code. I would define security in terms of how much threat viruses pose to your system. A bad castle in the bronze age is more secure than a good castle in modern times. However, it's not a hugely important point, because neither definition is inherently right, and really it comes down to semantics."

which castle would you rather be in during an attack lol the highly secure one or the one with one old half bind sentry and an unlocked door. yes you are far less likely to be attacked but if you are you have less protection, I know mac users that use no security software at all because they think like you do but they are far more likely to have a keylogger steal their credit card info than someone that has a windows machine with a firewall and antivirus/antispyware software who checks to make sure that the sites they enter that data into is secure etc. My point is there are mac viruses and keyloggers etc for the mac infact they are on the rise but as people think they don't have to worry about it because they have a mac they are far less secure.

 

Well yes, I am willing to admit that in the particular situation of a smart windows user who is currently experiencing an attack is going to have less negative consequences than an equally intelligent Mac user who is currently experiencing a threat of equal magnitude. That is infact exactly what the hacker said in the OP and I did not disagree with this.

 

I have stated many times that my definition of secure includes the likelihood of experiencing an attack, while acknowledging that yours is purely based on a theoretical "Whose code is better" perspective - what I might refer to as inherent security I suppose, and that neither of these is objectively correct.

 

And yes, the 'security through obscurity' that Mac users enjoy is starting to wear off, mostly because the mac userbase is growing (both in terms of install base and market share), making Macking (Mac Hacking) a more profitable venture. However, I am also of the opinion that Apple is currently developing their antivirus protection at a rate more then able to offset the aforementioned decline. Apple has started officially spreading the word that antivirus software is still essential for a mac user, and the inherent security of their programs is improving

That is still not fixing the significant number of security holes in their software that have been present ever since the switch to OSX .  They really aren't taking their security as seriously as they should, for them to have more identified security issues than Microsoft is crazy.

LRN 2 google

 

One company reports Mac OSx 10.6.3 as having 7 and Windows 7 as having 2. The other company reports OSX 10.6.3 as having 1 and W7 as having 20 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_operating_system#Security. Oh, and you don't even want to go here http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_web_browsers#Vulnerabilities. It will make you cry.

 



zarx said:
scottie said:
zarx said:
scottie said:
r505Matt said:
scottie said:
Kenoid said:

 

 

fair enough I guess but I would still prefer to be prepared myself it only takes one successful attack for you identity/money to be stolen, and a well protected (firewall antivirus etc) windows system is more secure than just running a Mac. I have read reports that malware writers are starting to attack more Mac OS and multi platform apps like Acrobat, Flash and web browsers as they are softer targets, it's good that Apple are starting to consider security more but if their userbase keeps growing and windows systems are kkep getting harder to exploit I think there will be an exponential increase in the amount of malware that targets apple systems and I think Apple could be more proactive in securing their systems they have hidden behind obscurity for to long.

I'm probably protected in a similar fashion to you, and I don't even have a credit card or anything worth stealing. I run W7 with all the latest patches, and I run AVG.

 

Only time will tell if the security improvements Apple is bringing about is enough to counter the effect of increasing attention from the hacking community. 

 

Well in terms of aiming at Acrobat - that wont trouble Mac users, because once you have used preview, you will never go back to Acrobat reader (pdfs open ludicrously faster, and hog less ram, much better browsing and search functions - nothing that is all that important for a 5 page PDF, but when you're opening PDFs with 1000 pages, it's incredible). Targeting web browsers also leaves mac users sitting pretty, no IE, lots of FF.



scottie said:
zarx said:
scottie said:
r505Matt said:
scottie said:
Kenoid said:

 

Security is a state of being, not something situational. You can't just change up the variables just to suit your purpose, you have to keep consistencies or there's no point. So a well locked bankvault which people know to contain billions or a fairly poorly locked bankvault which people know to contain billions of dollars. There's a difference in 1 variable, not 2. 

A well built castle defending a vital point or a poorly built castle defending a vital point. Again, the only different there is a variable in security. Otherwise you an say whatever you want to suit any purpose, and has no bearing on validity, and doesn't contribute to a discussion.

The fact of the matter is that Windows suffers repeated continuous attacks at all times, whereas Mac OSX doesnt. However you interpret that is up to you. As someone put it, MS has gone through a trial by fire, and has come out stronger and better for it. If Apple were hit by the same force, I'd imagine their security could fall apart.

 

But in the Mac/Pc debate there are two variables - you make a lot more money from kacing PC's than you do macs, because more people use them. So thanks for admitting my comparison is perfect :)

 

And this is why I said that you would be better off reading my first post properly

 

"2) Whatever the reason, Mac is more secure. This guy, as a computer hacker, defines security purely in terms of the strength of the code. I would define security in terms of how much threat viruses pose to your system. A bad castle in the bronze age is more secure than a good castle in modern times. However, it's not a hugely important point, because neither definition is inherently right, and really it comes down to semantics."

which castle would you rather be in during an attack lol the highly secure one or the one with one old half bind sentry and an unlocked door. yes you are far less likely to be attacked but if you are you have less protection, I know mac users that use no security software at all because they think like you do but they are far more likely to have a keylogger steal their credit card info than someone that has a windows machine with a firewall and antivirus/antispyware software who checks to make sure that the sites they enter that data into is secure etc. My point is there are mac viruses and keyloggers etc for the mac infact they are on the rise but as people think they don't have to worry about it because they have a mac they are far less secure.

 

Well yes, I am willing to admit that in the particular situation of a smart windows user who is currently experiencing an attack is going to have less negative consequences than an equally intelligent Mac user who is currently experiencing a threat of equal magnitude. That is infact exactly what the hacker said in the OP and I did not disagree with this.

 

I have stated many times that my definition of secure includes the likelihood of experiencing an attack, while acknowledging that yours is purely based on a theoretical "Whose code is better" perspective - what I might refer to as inherent security I suppose, and that neither of these is objectively correct.

 

And yes, the 'security through obscurity' that Mac users enjoy is starting to wear off, mostly because the mac userbase is growing (both in terms of install base and market share), making Macking (Mac Hacking) a more profitable venture. However, I am also of the opinion that Apple is currently developing their antivirus protection at a rate more then able to offset the aforementioned decline. Apple has started officially spreading the word that antivirus software is still essential for a mac user, and the inherent security of their programs is improving

You know, after thinking about it, you do have an interesting point, even if I don't fully agree with it. There's also something I think you're missing in terms of potential. Apple could be attacked at any time, it's not on some remote hill, just no one's really cared to look at it yet. But, the hacker community can be pretty fickle, and maybe some of them could just switch to Macs at any time. In one sense, the second that happens, the Mac's security lowers, but in the other sense, the Mac's security is still the same. Everyone here but you is talking in regards to the latter, you're the only one talking about the former. It makes it hard to have a discussion with you since we're all on a different page.

In regards to your "security through obscurity starting to wear off"

http://www.macsimumnews.com/index.php/archive/gartner_apple_has_8_us_computer_market_share/

http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2325860,00.asp

So Apple was at an ~8% market share 10 years ago, and is finally now back at that level now. That's not really indicative of a growing userbase. I'm looking at the big picture, not just the past couple of year. Granted, they hit an all time low of 2.2% around 2006, and have done wonders to come back, but that doesn't mean they'll break beyond the 10% barrier. And that's just US, Apple is estimated around 5% worldwide but I don't think it's tracked WW. So in terms of the last 3-4 years, yes the userbase is growing, but in comparison to 10 years ago, it's the same, it just dipped down and came back.

 

 



r505Matt said:
scottie said:
zarx said:
scottie said:
r505Matt said:
scottie said:
Kenoid said:

 

 

 

 

 

 

You know, after thinking about it, you do have an interesting point, even if I don't fully agree with it. There's also something I think you're missing in terms of potential. Apple could be attacked at any time, it's not on some remote hill, just no one's really cared to look at it yet. But, the hacker community can be pretty fickle, and maybe some of them could just switch to Macs at any time. In one sense, the second that happens, the Mac's security lowers, but in the other sense, the Mac's security is still the same. Everyone here but you is talking in regards to the latter, you're the only one talking about the former. It makes it hard to have a discussion with you since we're all on a different page.

In regards to your "security through obscurity starting to wear off"

http://www.macsimumnews.com/index.php/archive/gartner_apple_has_8_us_computer_market_share/

http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2325860,00.asp

So Apple was at an ~8% market share 10 years ago, and is finally now back at that level now. That's not really indicative of a growing userbase. I'm looking at the big picture, not just the past couple of year. Granted, they hit an all time low of 2.2% around 2006, and have done wonders to come back, but that doesn't mean they'll break beyond the 10% barrier. And that's just US, Apple is estimated around 5% worldwide but I don't think it's tracked WW. So in terms of the last 3-4 years, yes the userbase is growing, but in comparison to 10 years ago, it's the same, it just dipped down and came back.

 

It's true that the differing definitions make it confusing, but we both understand what the other means so it shouldn't be too bad.

 

6%, not 5 btw for OSX's worldwide share, closer to 7% for Apple (Iphone)

 

But yes, you are right in that until Apple hits about 60% market share it can still be considered to be to have lost marketshare from where it was before - don't think it's all that important though, it's currently trending up and I have no reason to believe that will change any time soon