i somehow got the Coolsearch hijacker some years ago and was totally unable
to remove it. given that it is reported to hijack your browser and send you
to places that could give you jail time, I rebuilt my windows machine from
scratch. not all viruses are merely annoying.

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf
Of Paul McNett
Sent: Wednesday, 30 September 2009 1:23 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Brought to you by the people who gave you IE

Ed Leafe wrote:
> On Sep 29, 2009, at 11:22 PM, MB Software Solutions General Account  
> wrote:
> 
>> Saw an article the other day that suggested the virus writers are
>> targeting Macs more nowadays.  Is it only a matter of time until the
>> next target is Ubuntu, or is that O/S structured in such a way to be
>> immune to a virus attack?
> 
> 
>       I don't think that anyone would be naive enough to claim that any  
> networked computer would be "immune" to an attack. But the point is  
> that *nix was designed from the outset to be a networked OS, so it is  
> inherently not as vulnerable as a Windows box. There are still many  
> exploits that can be found in apps that can compromise the box, no  
> matter what OS - even OS X or Ubuntu. It's just a much higher bar to  
> clear.

Let's also not forget that there's a big market for anti-virus and
anti-spyware 
software for Windows machines (and next to no market for these on Mac and
Linux).

So even if the AV companies aren't directly writing exploits, it sure is in
their 
best interests for exploits to keep appearing, and for the image to be that
AV is 
necessary.

I've been running my WinXP box for years now with no AV installed, and no
virus 
infections. Every now and then I run a scan of the filesystem using ClamAV
on Linux, 
and sure it finds some virus email attachments, but they've never been run
so there 
wasn't any harm done.

I've only recently installed AV software on my client's network, because of
some 
minor spyware problems over the past few months. This is after over 10 years
of them 
being on the Internet with Windows NT, 2K, and XP.

So there's definitely hype over virus threats, but there's also some best
practices 
we've followed, such as having a robust perimeter firewall, not running IE
or 
Outlook/Outlook Express, having good spam filtering, turning off Windows
File and 
Print Sharing (because they are unnecessary and dangerous), not letting
normal users 
write to the Windows or Program Files directories (a policy I've had in
place the 
entire time), using secure tunnels, and also having trained, educated users.

Try turning off your background AV sometime. You may be pleasantly surprised
at how 
much nicer it is to work on your machine.

Paul


[excessive quoting removed by server]

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