a trojan horse is not a virus |
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I'll have to find the article again, but 20,000 Macs were infected with some malware trojan virus after trying to download a bootleg copy of iWork09. |
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a trojan horse is not a virus |
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But Macs don't get viruses. Let me ask my Mac overlords what this contradiction could mean... |
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anyone can write a destructive program, call it "cracked version of some-other-program" and trick a user into running it |
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Free game |
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As Ynot said, it's a trojan horse, not a virus. Anyone can use a bit of social engineering to get people to run a destructive program on any operating system. I'll bet if you create a destructive executable (let's say a Platypus application bundle wrapped around a shell script) and replace its Finder icon with the Preview icon, the vast majority of Mac OS X users would double-click it, thinking it to be an image file that opens in Preview. You could archive it with tar to preserve the necessary metadata. An OS is only as secure as its users. What bothers me is that the OP sounded excited that 20,000 people just fscked up their computers... |
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Yeah, I'll admit it did make me a little excited on the inside |
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Trojans aren't considered viruses. |
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Holy batman, I better call shit! |
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does anti virus software pick up trojan horses and worms? even though by definition they arent viruses |
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I don't think there are antivirus programs for Macs... if there are then people are getting really ripped off. I can write a Mac anti-virus program in ten seconds. |
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Obviously you wouldn't pay for one, but free anti-virus programs like clamxav are useful if you're sharing files with machines that run Windows. |
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Oops, hey gimme a break, how often do software engineers actually use cout? |
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You're wrong about that. K&R says it's optional, and gcc with -strict and -pedantic doesn't issue any warnings. |
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why are a couple of you saying macs dont get viruses. how exactly can a machine which runs programs not get a virus. all a virus is is a program really |
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no, |
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Last edited by Ynot; 02-04-2009 at 02:33 AM.
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No. Trojan horses are just malicious programs. Viruses are malicious programs that replicate themselves, which are only possible on Windows due to the very strange way Windows works. It's really sad that a lot of Windows users take the concept of viruses (i.e. the concept of a piece of technology that can get "sick") for granted. |
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as a side note, |
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hey, i know that a trojan horse is different from a virus, and i know why, but i thought that a virus and a trojan horse was a program, but ynot is saying a virus isnt a program (even though his description of it would empley that it is a program), but dsr is saying that it is a program, so im pretty dam confused. in my own opinion, i would say that a virus would have to be a program, because what else could it be, and it would need something for it to know to replicate itself etc. |
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