It's probably about a yearly hacking contest, where boxes are setup and then 
people are invited to hack them. Mac OS X did indeed succumb most quickly there 
in the last few years. In addition there has been reports of one infection in 
the wild that uses java, and is able to run on mac os as well as on windows.

Windows is protected by UAC, Antivirus, and windows defender. I'd argue that in 
everyday environments, windows is actually better secured then mac os and maybe 
on even footing with linux. On the flipside, it's also the most likely one to 
be targeted. Because most infections for people like us come in randomly, the 
risk of having a crisis is therefore far bigger on windows.

I do have a windows machine, and I consider it the insecure one, compared to my 
unpatched mac os  x server and my everyday machine. Linux is too hard to use 
for me, so I can't comment much on that, beyond it probably not being the 
target of anyone with it's almost inexistent market share among non-tech 
oriented users.

On 31 Oct 2010, at 18:57, stephen barncard wrote:

> Peter, where do you get these 'facts' about the security and vulnerability
> of MacOS today? Your statement just doesn't match up with my experience with
> the OS.
> 
> "Dead Duck?"
> 
> 
> On 31 October 2010 02:22, Peter Alcibiades 
> <palcibiades-fi...@yahoo.co.uk>wrote:
> 
>>  OSX is a dead duck almost right away, Windows
>> not long after, and Linux holds out longest.  But I don't know what the
>> starting setup is on the windows installation.



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