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Microsoft Antivirus Software?

Opinion from John Dvorak at PC Mag

         

tedster

3:18 am on Dec 23, 2001 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Here's an interesting column from John Dvorak at PC Mag about Microsoft and antivirus software [pcmag.com]. The source of the conjecture was Bill Gates hisself!

Microsoft has to find some reasonable excuse to access your machine. And antivirus updates are that excuse. The company believes that if it can get people used to constant updating, it can then use the connections for other purposes as well. The other purposes, of course, are mercantile.

Key_Master

4:03 am on Dec 23, 2001 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Don't they get enough traffic from customers needing security patch fixes?

On the other hand, since most viruses attack Windows operating systems anyway, it makes sense for them to cut out the middle man. This would be the perfect opportunity for them to cover up the problems with their software.

Xoc

9:58 pm on Dec 23, 2001 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



I don't think Microsoft wants to be in the business of AntiVirus software. I could be wrong, but if a virus gets through, it becomes the AntiVirus vendor's fault. Microsoft gets enough bad press and bad feeling to court this.

Microsoft could stop 99% of the viruses in the world by just making it so you could turn off HTML rendering in Outlook and Outlook Express.

Dvorak tries to be controversial.

EliteWeb

12:12 am on Dec 27, 2001 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



I hope you dont believe that MS hates the bad press. They love it and they love any press, as long as they are in the news everyday.

Soon or even in today, it is ok for MS to have bugs and holes it gets people to goto their sites and to update and to see the name MS and to buy new software.

Key_Master

12:39 am on Dec 27, 2001 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



>>>I hope you dont believe that MS hates the bad press.<<<

Bad press would be Master Lock, Inc. constructing locks as secure as $m operating systems. They would go bankrupt in a month. The truth is, Microsoft doesn't get bad press. Most people aren't aware that $m doesn't take security issues seriously. They've been able to slide by on the misguided public belief that 12 years old computer hackers are smarter than $m engineers. People just don't understand how vulnerable $m products really are.

I'm thinking it's time John Stossel [abcnews.go.com] (sorry, popup warning) to do one of his "Gimme a break!" stories.