McAfee Retracts Lowball Bug Damage Estimate
bennyboy64 writes "McAfee has changed its official response [warning: interstitial] on how many enterprise customers were affected by a bug that caused havoc on computers globally. It originally stated the bug affected 'less than half of 1 per cent' of enterprise customers. Now McAfee's blog states it was a 'small percentage' of enterprise customers. ZDNet is running a poll and opinion piece on whether McAfee should compensate customers. ZDNet notes a supermarket giant in Australia that had to close down its stores as they were affected by the bug, causing a loss of thousands of dollars."
I thought this affected anyone running XP SP3, which I expect would be a majority of enterprise desktops, not less than half of one percent.
http://blindscribblings.com - Tasty pop-culture in conceptual fashion.
... why they didn't test the new dat file against Windows system files.
Seriously, we pay them a LOT of money for their product licenses and they cannot even test against known system files?
I feel sorry for that super market chain but: wtf is AV doing on a POS computer?
POS should be a dedicated computer, running one and only one application (the POS software), on a thoroughly shielded LAN, talking to only a centralised server (or small network of servers if one is not enough) that collects the sales data and distributes prices etc. That server should itself be connected only to the POS network and a corporate LAN. In other words: no direct access out of the Internet, no web browsing, no local storage of any data files, no downloading, nothing that could have the most remote risk of a virus.
Or am I missing something here?
Quite apt, even though not POS: http://xkcd.com/463/.
I know assumptions are bad, but is it really that big a stretch to assume the vendor tests their updates on their supported platforms?
It's not like these were weird corner-cases.
For large sets, this will be our guide even unto death, for the LORD will work for each type of data it is applied to...
On a correctly designed OS:
a) there's no need to run an anti-virus
b) a third-party party software does NOT need to know the admin/root password to do its job
c) a software running without admin/root priviledges CANNOT break havoc in anything but the user account
Tech-savvy companies who switched tens of thousands of XP machines to Linux and were
criticized for doing so by MS fanbois/astroturfers (don't forget to add *that* to your CTO reports
if they were running Mc Afee) are now laughing all the way to the bank.
But, I know dear MS fanbois/astroturfers: nothing to see here, move along, Windows has
nothing to do with this issue right!? Because the Windows family are the most well-designed
OSes on earth right!? It's of course the fault of McAfee (nonetheless on *my* OS there's
no third-party software that can render my system unusable)... And all the paid "reporters"
that make a living by ever only talking about the Microsoft ecosystem would be silly to
cut the grass under their feet by pointing out the *real* guilty one here.
But, no, dear paid MS astroturfer/fanboi, I won't find your answer compelling.
When was the last virus outbreak that caused this much damage?