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Apple Computing Products:
macOS - Apps and Programs
Any good virus protection for iMac?
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<blockquote data-quote="Doug b" data-source="post: 1313048" data-attributes="member: 59143"><p>As Brian has already stated, that was NOT a virus. While technically speaking, there are variants of viruses out there in general (trojan can be one), that was simply a pop up in the form of adware/malware. The term malware is broad in scope and in this case represented "adware". Those using Safari who had the "open safe downloads" box checked, were easiest to get to, while those of us using other browsers had to physically look in the downloads folder and then physically click on the download, then give admin privileges in order to run the more or less benign code. </p><p></p><p>They also had a variant that would download if you clicked on a particular image in Google's image database. But essentially, it was just a very rudimentary attempt to try and get credit card info from naive switchers. </p><p></p><p>But a self propagating, typical kind of virus it was NOT. Not by a long shot. I think it's important to understand the different types of "viruses" out there, and how they are spread and how they behave. Because once one understands those things, the easier it would be to understand why your average AV software is unnecessary for OS X. </p><p></p><p>I only ever ran AVG for Windows, and was just fine with that. I did of course run spybot, and other malware checkers, but that's because those sorts of things are a different animal. Surf safely, don't download from unknown sources, don't visit questionable sites and don't click on everything that says click me! Having a good firewall/router is more than enough after all of that. This is years of experience talking here, nothing more. </p><p></p><p>Doug</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Doug b, post: 1313048, member: 59143"] As Brian has already stated, that was NOT a virus. While technically speaking, there are variants of viruses out there in general (trojan can be one), that was simply a pop up in the form of adware/malware. The term malware is broad in scope and in this case represented "adware". Those using Safari who had the "open safe downloads" box checked, were easiest to get to, while those of us using other browsers had to physically look in the downloads folder and then physically click on the download, then give admin privileges in order to run the more or less benign code. They also had a variant that would download if you clicked on a particular image in Google's image database. But essentially, it was just a very rudimentary attempt to try and get credit card info from naive switchers. But a self propagating, typical kind of virus it was NOT. Not by a long shot. I think it's important to understand the different types of "viruses" out there, and how they are spread and how they behave. Because once one understands those things, the easier it would be to understand why your average AV software is unnecessary for OS X. I only ever ran AVG for Windows, and was just fine with that. I did of course run spybot, and other malware checkers, but that's because those sorts of things are a different animal. Surf safely, don't download from unknown sources, don't visit questionable sites and don't click on everything that says click me! Having a good firewall/router is more than enough after all of that. This is years of experience talking here, nothing more. Doug [/QUOTE]
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Apple Computing Products:
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Any good virus protection for iMac?
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