Computer columnist: anti-virus software purely optional for Apple Macs, not so for Windows

“If you own a Windows PC, you need to have a current anti-virus product installed and running. There’s no longer a debate about it, no longer a way to be ‘really careful what you open’ and do without it,” James Derk reports for Scripps Howard News Service. “There are dozens of products out there for you to use and even some excellent free ones like AVG Free and Avast. It is such an important issue that Microsoft will be adding anti-virus to the next version of Windows as a pre-installed accessory.”

Derk reports, “With an Apple [Macintosh] computer, anti-virus software is purely optional in my opinion. I know there are some divergent opinions on this and there’s no harm in having it if you can afford it. But since there are no Apple viruses in the wild and the machine is designed to be more secure than a Windows machine, there’s little risk.”

“On spyware, this also is a Windows machine issue,” Derk reports. “This can be a far more complex issue depending upon whether you are already infected or simply trying to prevent an infection. If you already are infected, you may be able to eliminate the infection by using three or four products (there isn’t one that does a an effective removal job by itself.) You can try AdAware, Spybot Search & Destroy and Microsoft Anti-Spyware beta for free, then add Webroot’s Spy Sweeper and perhaps PestPatrol. A skilled professional can be required to get rid of some infections. And some infections require a complete erasure of the PC and reinstallation of the operating system and everything on it.”

Derk reports, “Again, Macs are mostly immune from spyware and pop-up issues,” Derk reports.

Full article here.

Advertisement: The New iMac G5 – Built-in iSight camera and remote control with Front Row media experience. From $1299. Free shipping.
Microsoft has been promising better security for years with each successive Windows packaging change. If you think Windows Vista is going to magically fix the problems, good luck to you.

Related MacDailyNews articles:
Microsoft apologists and why Apple’s Mac OS X has zero viruses – October 24, 2005
$500 bounty offered for proof of first Apple Mac OS X virus – September 27, 2005
Symantec: 10,866 new Microsoft Windows virus and worm variants in first half 2005 – September 19, 2005
Cargo magazine describes Apple’s Mac OS X’s immunity to viruses, spyware as ‘relative’ – September 10, 2005
ZDNet Australia publishes latest Mac OS X security FUD article – September 9, 2005
Consumer Reports dubiously finds 20-percent of Mac users ‘detected’ virus in last two years -UPDATED – August 10, 2005
Hackers already targeting viruses for Microsoft’s Windows Vista – August 04, 2005
16-percent of computer users are unaffected by viruses, malware because they use Apple Macs – June 15, 2005
ZDNet: How many Mac OS X users affected by the last 100 viruses? None, zero, not one, not ever – August 18, 2005
Intel CEO Otellini: If you want security now, buy a Macintosh instead of a Wintel PC – May 25, 2005
Apple touts Mac OS X security advantages over Windows – April 13, 2005
97,467 Microsoft Windows viruses vs. zero for Apple Mac’s OS X – April 05, 2005
Joke of the month: Gartner warns of Mac OS X ‘spyware infestation’ potential – March 30, 2005
Apple’s Mac OS X is virus-free – March 18, 2005
Cybersecurity advisor Clarke questions why anybody would buy from Microsoft – February 18, 2005
Security test: Windows XP system easily compromised while Apple’s Mac OS X stands safe and secure – November 30, 2004
Apple: ‘Opener’ is not a virus, Trojan horse, or worm – November 02, 2004
Microsoft: The safest way to run Windows is on your Mac – October 08, 2004
Information Security Investigator says switch from Windows to Mac OS X for security – September 24, 2004
Defending Windows over Mac a sign of mental illness – December 21, 2003
Columnist tries the ‘security through obscurity’ myth to defend Windows vs. Macs on virus front – October 1, 2003
New York Times: Mac OS X ‘much more secure than Windows XP’ – September 18, 2003
Fortune columnist: ‘get a Mac’ to thwart viruses; right answer for the wrong reasons – September 02, 2003
Shattering the Mac OS X ‘security through obscurity’ myth – August 28, 2003
Virus and worm problems not just due to market share; Windows inherently insecure vs. Mac OS X – August 24, 2003

52 Comments

  1. I just spent over an hour with a tech from my company trying to install the 8 Windows Security Updates my computer says I need to install, but I don’t have the priviledges to install, though I am an “Administrator”. Finally after much swearing, and turning off my firewall, virus scanner, and running Ad Aware they got installed.

    He just made jokes about how computers just need maintenance some times. I chimed in that my Linux and OS X boxes don’t. He said he’d go bring me a Mac next time, like that was some joke. I hope he does!

    MDN word: power

  2. My Mac is virus free!

    Hooray!!!

    Just a thought, when Apple gets into the dual-core Intel chips and the thought of running both OS’s has been tossed around…what OS’s will it be Leopard and Vista? Who would want XP SP2 running on their Mac? It’s like saying, I want to share a room with someone who has leprosy.

  3. I have been using Apple computers since 1979, the Mac since June 1984 and I have never, NEVER had any issues related to virus, adware, spyware or anything of the like. No one hacking or cracking into my net or Macs. Never, ever.
    This is half of the Mac experience, the other being an insanely great user experience.
    I’m proud to be a Mac user and ACT.

  4. This is such a foreign idea to Windows users. My brother was shocked to hear that I had no anti-virus software and only used the software-based firewall that ships with the OS. I’ve been using Macs since 1984 and I’ve only ever had one virus, and that was on OS 8.

  5. Actually, I should specify that the one virus I did have was not on my home machine but at work. I can’t remember the name of it now, but it ate JPEGs and spread through many printers and service bureaus which is where we picked it up.

  6. It is so nice to troubleshoot Macs. My computer was randomly typing characters a week ago. If it were a WinBox I would have immediatly ran anti-virus and spyware removers. Since it was a Mac I looked at the OS and the hardware. It took me a total of five minutes to narrow it down to my keyboard shorting out.

    Just a proper antivirus scan can take 30 minutes.

    Long live Mac’s and helping with productivity.

    MW: simply “It simply works”

  7. I must be missing something: Didn’t McAfake and $ymantec recently announce to the world that Macintosh computers running OS X were “vulnerable to virus and coming under more hacker attacks” and general malware?

    So why do you Macintosh fanboys and Mac-centric journalist keep saying “their are no Mac virus in the wild”?

    ” width=”19″ height=”19″ alt=”raspberry” style=”border:0;” />

  8. Remember, McAfke and $ymantec make their living on scaring people with viruses and malware. They would go bankrupt if everyone suddenly switched to Macs They want you to go buy your D(h)ell. Then you buy their software. After a year, they hit you with a $30 fee to continue to get the latest definitions. So they now get $30 a year from john-q-uninformed-sheep mentality-public for the life of the machine. Then you have to buy another machine and the cycle repeats itself.

    MDN Word: “probably” as in OS X runs on UNIX. Probably not what you want to hear if you are an Anti-virus software maker.

  9. MDN Take is missing something. No “security by obscurity” arguments here. Give the guy a little more credit — you’re always harping about those who use that myth, so give a shout out to those who point out the true reasons!

    MW: design, as in Mac OS X is virus-free by design.

  10. I must be missing something: Didn’t McAfake and $ymantec recently announce to the world that Macintosh computers running OS X were “vulnerable to virus and coming under more hacker attacks” and general malware?

    So why do you Macintosh fanboys and Mac-centric journalist keep saying “their are no Mac virus in the wild”?

    Well, there are no Mac viruses in the wild! There is no adware or malware either! However, there is a theoretical possibility that viruses can be made for Macs as well but remember that it’s been five years since OS X came, and despite of money beeing put on the table, nobody has yet succeeded in making one!

  11. McAfake and $ymantec lied!

    Only infection I got was back in the pre-OSX days of… OS9, with the lovely ‘Autostart 98/04’ bug which would occassionally restart my mac.

    A bit annoying if you’d not saved the file you were working on for a while, but it never devoured my HD.

  12. “However, there is a theoretical possibility that viruses can be made for Macs as well but remember that it’s been five years since OS X came, and despite of money beeing put on the table, nobody has yet succeeded in making one!”

    As a Macintosh fanboy, even I think it’s inevitable that there, eventually, will be some in-the-wild security breach on Mac OS X. HOWEVER, there will never be the daily security circus that defines Windows, and Apple should be given a big standing ovation for that.

    Anyway it’s good knowing my Mac is above the stupid s*it, like getting hacked by a CD (see http://macdailynews.com/index.php/weblog/comments/7426/).

  13. There seems to be a HUGE point that people are missing. Antivirus only protects people from an ALREADY KNOWN virus. Since there are none on OSX, they serve no purpose. If there was magicly a huge outbreak, or creation of an OSX virus, people could then protect themselves by getting an Antivirus solution, but right now any OSX antivirus program is like buying all the ingredents to all the possible medicine combinaitons you can create without knowing anything about getting sick, or how to cure yourself if you ever got sick, all the while the risk of getting sick is almost null.

  14. emax – not strictly true. Those 97000 viruses people keep talking about for Windows are not really 97000 distinct algorithms – there may be vulnerabilities in Windows, but not that many! Thus most virus checkers also use heuristics and generic virus signatures to identify new variants on a theme. Which make up the vast majority of new viruses.

  15. To all Mac users:

    Please DO NOT install third-party security software. OS X is all you WILL EVER NEED! Now and until Hell Freezes Over! Please DO NOT! NEVER! Steve Jobs will take care of you – honestly, he will. OS X will FOREVER be secure against ALL sorts of hacking from ALL COMERS. Isn’t it just GREAT to be using AN IMPENETRABLE OS? Just say NO to all those stupid security types. JUST SAY NO!!!

Reader Feedback

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.