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Apple Usurps Oracle As the Biggest Threat To PC Security

AmiMoJo writes: According to data from Secunia, Apple's software for Windows is now the biggest threat to PC security, surpassing previous long term champion Java. Among U.S. users, some 61 percent of computers detected running QuickTime did not have the latest version. With iTunes, 47 percent of the installations were outdated versions. There were 18 vulnerabilities in Apple QuickTime 7 at the time of the study. Oracle has now fallen/risen to 2nd place, followed by Adobe. All three vendors bundle automatic updater utilities with their software, but users seem to be declining new versions. Update fatigue, perhaps?

4 of 320 comments (clear)

  1. Not fatigue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I was so excited when I got my iPhone 4. It's old, I know. Everything worked so well.

    Now... itunes has changed so much I can barely use it. It's always losing playlists, stopping play because it sees a cloud icon when the downloaded version is right underneath it, etc. Don't get me started about the hidden File Edit menus. My iphone barely works anymore. Browsers slow, maps is a joke, switching tasks takes a while.

    The last thing in the world I want to do is update itunes and IOS. Each time it gets more and more unusable, each time the experience stops 'just working'. I won't upgrade either again. Too scared. Too much time to remake all those playlists. Too worried about the lag from the new OS or insanely strange UI of itunes.

    It's too bad we can't just stick with a version that works, but this 'one size fits all' approach isn't working great.

  2. Re: It's a business opportunity! by John+Allsup · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If the vendor has not managed to produce a properly written, secure, bug free piece of software by the 10th attempt, what faith should one have in the 11th. Software updates have lead to bloat, bug tolerance and laziness. If vendors were required to ship working software, rather than anything they liked, we would have less software, but far less low quality software. Oracle, Apple and Adobe have some amazingly well written code lurking in their products, but it is buried under tons of bloated rubbish that should never have been considered fit to release.

    --
    John_Chalisque
  3. Re:It's a business opportunity! by Bert64 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The problem is the "updaters", and these only exist because windows doesn't provide a centralised update system for applications to hook into.

    You end up with a load of background updater processes wasting resources at all times, so they end up getting turned off.
    And because the update process happens in userland, unprivileged users (ie most corporate installs) cannot apply the updates or run the updater.
    Most corporate deployments won't update these applications centrally because doing so is a painful process.

    --
    http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
  4. Re:Users View Updates from Apple as Risky by upuv · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I have to completely agree.

    Apple software installs effectively trash your carefully configured machine. How many WTF moments have I had just after a simple update and realise that my personal content has now magically moved. To where? Pictures and Videos I take of the family all of a sudden are assimilated into the Apple sphere. My preferences for video audio, homepage, picture, editing etc all trashed.

    And in most case it's damn near impossible to remove. Thus being relegated to un-used software that is slowly dying in a dark corner of the hard-drive.