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Tasmanian Dept. of Education Wants Anti-Virus for Linux, OS X

An anonymous reader writes "One of Australia's largest government technology buyers, the Tasmanian Department of Education, has gone to market for a security vendor to supply anti-virus software for its 40,000-odd desktop PCs and laptops, as well as servers. But the department's not just running Windows — it runs Mac OS X and Linux as well, and has requested that whatever solution it buys must be able to run on those platforms as well. But have we reached the stage were Mac OS X and Linux even need third-party security software? It seems like most Mac and Linux users don't run it."

2 of 396 comments (clear)

  1. prophecy by greenfruitsalad · · Score: 5, Insightful

    1 group will claim GNU/Linux doesn't need anti virus software.
    2nd group will claim they use antivirus on their GNU/Linux already, but only to clean emails destined for MS Windows machines or to look after their Samba exported storage.
    3rd group will say GNU/Linux needs AV software because it's only a matter of time before viruses (virii?) appear.
    4th group will say viruses for GNU/Linux already exist and provide links to some sensationalist articles on the interwebs where researchers published some concepts.
    5th group (partially composed of group 1 and 2) will claim they're not real viruses, but worms/snakes/butterflies/etc...
    6th group will claim the threat aren't viruses but PPAs in ubuntu.
    3rd/4th group will return saying it's all about users and not the OS. And because they're careful users, they've never in their life needed AV on their MS Windows.
    Does that about cover that? Let the holy war begin...

  2. Re:no by DrgnDancer · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The DoD's reasoning is pretty straightforward. There are few to no "in the wild" viruses or trojans for Linux/Mac (several worms though), but data rarely stays in one platform in an interconnected world. We put virus protection on every platform so that whenever a document or program is introduced on the network it gets scanned. That way if it has malware in it, even Windows malware on a Linux/Mac system, it's caught early. Just because I first put the document on a Linux system doesn't mean it's going to stay on a Linux system.

    --
    I don't need a million points of light, just two points of multi-mode fiber and a 10 Gig-E router.