At the end of the day this isn't about which OS is best. And it isn't about security through obscurity. OS makers need to continue to strive for perfection, for multiple layers of protection, to block hackers from gaining the ultimate prize of full control of resources and to include alerting and management tools which make monitoring penetrations easier and which make dealing with them less of a chore. . . .
At the end of the day this isn't about which OS is best. And it isn't about security through obscurity. OS makers need to continue to strive for perfection, for multiple layers of protection, to block hackers from gaining the ultimate prize of full control of resources and to include alerting and management tools which make monitoring penetrations easier and which make dealing with them less of a chore.

Taken in perspective, these results may be surprising and even encouraging for Apple and BSD fans, but at the granular level, 10,000 successful attacks is still 10,000 successful attacks.

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