Vendors mull security software for Mac OS X
If hackers suddenly target Apple's OS, security firms say they're ready
- New Windows worm builds massive botnet
- Windows market share dives below 90% for first time
- 7 ways to cut your software costs during the economic downturn
- Major e-stores malfunction on Black Friday and Cyber Monday
- How spyware nearly sent a teacher to prison
- Glory days: How high school shaped nine IT leaders
The Security Zone
With the mobility of employees and the ease with which external devices can be brought in and out of a network, continuing to build your security plan for network servers and clients is a must. Fortunately, there is much that organizations can do to protect themselves from attacks - internal and external. Having the right policies, procedures and server configurations is critical... Learn more in The Security Zone See All Zones
|
March 4, 2008 (IDG News Service) HANOVER, Germany — Russian security vendor Kaspersky Lab has a prototype version of its virus protection software waiting in the wings in case Apple Inc.'s Mac OS X suddenly becomes a target of choice for hackers.
Kaspersky, based in Moscow, has no plans soon to turn the software into an actual product, but one could "be ready in just days," said Kaspersky spokesman Timur Tsoriev at the CeBIT technology trade show in Germany on Tuesday.
Kaspersky's antivirus technology is flexible enough to work on different operating systems, said CEO Eugene Kaspersky. The company's analysts have also cracked open an iPhone, which runs a slimmed-down version of OS X, to see how it runs.
Whether or not to offer protection for Apple's operating system has been a question for security vendors. At times, they've found it hard to make a business case to invest resources into building security software, since Apple users feel segregated from the attacks suffered on a regular basis by Windows users. But as Apple's share of the computer market has grown, security analysts and vendors have predicted that Apple's seeming immunity won't last.
So far, they've been pretty much wrong, as there have been no attacks on the scale that sometimes affects Windows machines, such as the Storm Worm. But Apple's software is far from perfect: In December, Apple issued 31 updates for Mac OS X. Its QuickTime multimedia player has also been patched several times.
As of now, hackers "don't pay any attention to the Mac at all," Kaspersky said. But it may come as no surprise that Kaspersky, whose business is based on selling security products, maintains skepticism about the security of most operating systems, including Mac OS X.
"We see that Mac OS is taking a bigger and bigger share of the market," Kaspersky said. "We made the prototype to be ready just in case."
Net Applications, which tracks operating systems, said in January that Mac OS X comprised about 7.6% of all of the PCs that visited a sampling of monitored Web sites. It was the third month in a row that the percentage increased.
Of security vendors with top market share, Symantec and McAfee have products for Mac OS X, and Trend Micro secured a partnership last September to distribute software from Intego, which specializes in Mac security products. Sophos, a company that focuses on the mostly Windows corporate market, also supports the latest version of Mac OS X 10.5 "Leopard."
Finnish vendor F-Secure scuttled its Mac products around 1998, said Mikko Hypponen, chief research officer. But he didn't rule out the company taking another look at the platform. "Most of the hard-core geeks in our lab use Macs," he said.
Reprinted with permission from
Story copyright 2008 International Data Group. All rights reserved.
Today's Top Stories
Resource Alerts
Webcasts
The Secure Web Gateway. Mission Critical For Business
Dynamic Data Center and Virtualization Drives Operational Excellence at Emory Healthcare
Fired up about IT? Join Sharkbait and share your true tales of IT. SharkBait is the place for you to sound off about everything IT the good, the bad, and the rest of the weird stuff you deal with every day.New baits |
|
![]() |
|
Patrick Thibodeau: Satellite images of U.S military bases Which is more important? Helping terrorists or protecting military bases? Answer: protecting Web 2.0 ... [more] |
|
White Papers
Read up on the latest ideas and technologies from companies that sell hardware, software and services.
|
||||||
|




Subscribe to
Computerworld 







Read up on the latest ideas and technologies from companies that sell hardware, software and services.


