I’d be cautious installing apps like this where the source code is not public, it is a very common tactic for threat actors to release useful pieces of software that people install on their computers without realising the app is also harvesting contacts, passwords, cookies, searching for cryptocurrency keys etc. If at all possible you’re much better off using web based tools which will not get any meaningful access to your local machine as they’re running within a browser.Free MacOS Apps - 22 of them!
So if Microsoft doesn't publish the source code for Windows, Word, PowerPoint, etc. for public perusal, you won't install their products? Pull the other one please!I’d be cautious installing apps like this where the source code is not public,
I'm not sure I understand this sentence.This applies to Windows as much as macOS, but it’s much more on to download macOS apps from random websites and also not to be running an anti-malware tool.
To get malware onto somebodies computer this way a threat actor might offer the developer of an existing piece of software say €10k to insert it or sell the software to them quietly so they can do it themselves (very common with Chrome plugins for example), create a unique piece of software people want but hide malware in it (torch apps, shopping list apps, calculators etc) or compromise the development environment of an existing piece of software and insert the malware. Only the latter is feasible if the target is a Microsoft and compromising the development environment of an organisation like Microsoft versus a single developer machine is mostly a nation-state only game. So yes there is a massive difference between closed source software from Microsoft/Google etc compared to Joe Bloggs from Clonmel. I’m not really a big open source fan, but when it comes to these tools from solo developers it does offer a degree of protection.So if Microsoft doesn't publish the source code for Windows, Word, PowerPoint, etc. for public perusal, you won't install their products? Pull the other one please!
Does this interest you?macOS has powerful anti-malware tools built into the OS as highlighted by @ClubMan and discussed elsewhere in this forum already. I trust them as I trusted their predecessors back to pre-System 6 days and have had no reason to doubt their effectiveness in almost 40 years. System 6 was released in 1988. I was using Macintosh computers before then.
Thanks for voicing your concerns but I don't share them.
Hmm yeah that is unintelligible sorry! What I was trying to say was that Windows is not immune to the same risks, but that it is much more common for Windows users to run anti-malware tools than macOS users might.I'm not sure I understand this sentence.
But I wouldn't expect a vendor of anti-malware software to say anything else, even if those numbers are from 5 years ago.Malwarebytes State of Malware 2021 report: "In 2020, we identified 75,285,427 detections on Windows endpoints and 674,744 detections on Mac endpoints. When accounting for the number of endpoints, Mac detections per endpoint were higher than those on Windows."
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