Britain's biggest technology magazine
SEARCH FOR: IN:
      
Welcome Guest  Register Log in

News 

[PSUs]
Tuesday 2nd November 2004
OS X is world's most secure operating system, report concludes 12:50PM, Tuesday 2nd November 2004
Mac OS X and BSD Unix have been named as the world's safest and most secure online computing environments after a year-long study by enterprise security specialists mi2g.

In what is describes as 'the most comprehensive study ever undertaken', mi2g's Intelligence Unit analysed over 235,000 security breaches against permanently online systems and found that Mac OS X or BSD (on which OS X is partly based) accounted for just 4.82 per cent of all successful attacks. Linux was the least secure, with 65.64 per cent while Windows accounted for most of the remainder.

In Government environments, where
 
 
ADVERTISEMENT
breaches should be treated with the utmost concern, the positions of Windows and Linux are reversed, due in no small part to a succession of worms and trojans directed against Microsoft's OS.

'More and more smart individuals, government agencies and corporations are shifting towards Apple and BSD environments in 2004,' said DK Matai, executive chairman of mi2g. 'For how long can the truth remain hidden that the great emperors of the software industry are wearing no clothes fit for the fluid environment in which computing takes place, where new threats manifest every hour of every day?

'There is an accelerating paradigm shift visible in 2004 and busy professionals have spotted the benefits of Apple and BSD because they don't have the time to cope with umpteen flavours of Linux or to wait for Microsoft's Longhorn when Windows XP has proved to be a stumbling block in some well chronicled instances.'

For more information visit www.mi2g.com.

Submit to: Digg  |  Slashdot  |  Del.icio.us  |  Technorati

Related News



Top 10 Broadband

150+ broadband packages

Compare 30+ mobile broadband deals

Powered by Top 10 Broadband


Columns

Under Development: Splitting the difference

While Mrs R struggles to get her fix of Grey's Anatomy, David Robinson finds that breaking up is not so hard to do when it comes to useless bits of technology. › See full Opinion