Agree with Moon. I run AVG on my kids machines with no problems.
Agree with Moon. I run AVG on my kids machines with no problems.
[AK]Bribo
If you were a zombie and I had to kill you, I'd feel sad.
OS X
The sun has fallen down
And the billboards are all leering
And the flags are all dead at the top of their poles.
I sometimes wonder about that. The claim is that Apple is virus free, because it's a different OS. The counter claim is that because it has such low market share, no one bothers to write a virus for it. If that counter claim is true, that's not a comforting position. All it takes is for someone to decide he doesn't want to be a me-too virus writer, but really make a name for himself and stand out. And so target Apple.
I'm not sure how these things work though. The way virus' propagate, maybe they basically can't propagate if something has a low market share - because there's not enough "hosts bodies" out there to keep the strain alive.
With an Unix based OS you cannot drop files onto a machine and have a process that runs it cause the virus to spread and do it's damage. This is the beauty of an OS that is locked down and executes processes based on interaction from the system directly and the user that requests it. RUNDLL32 is a whore of a plague on Windows.
I switched to Microsoft Security Essentials too -- got tired of nag screens. Seems to be working fine.
[AK]Abaddon
OSX isn't virus proof, but times have changed. Most infections these days are written by criminals who are trying to grab credit cards, set up file shares, or bots for spamming or launching denial of service attacks. The days of some disgruntled Eastern European kiddie writing something to delete your hard disk and nothing else are mostly gone.
However it's accomplished, Mac users don't worry about viruses or spyware.
Whistling through the graveyard maybe, but there it is.
The sun has fallen down
And the billboards are all leering
And the flags are all dead at the top of their poles.