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- According to experts, the reason why Windows is considered less secure than competing operating systems is not because of the lack of security standards and innovation from Microsoft, but because of its large attack surface and predominant use in enterprises.
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Jun 12, 2023 · The primary reason that Windows is generally considered the least secure is that it’s the most popular operating system in the world, so more malware gets made for Windows devices than any...
Sep 6, 2024 · The reason is simple. Malware coders hit Windows and Android because that’s where the most security holes are found. As Windows 11 achieves wider usage, that may change. Microsoft has taken...
Jul 10, 2023 · It's not true, but a new survey by security site All About Cookies seems to indicate that far too many macOS users believe their systems are immune, even though they're security-conscious...
- Security Features
- Anti-Malware
- Sandboxing
- Codesigning
- System Protection
- The Popular (and Wrong) Arguments
- Security Isn’T A Feature of Your OS
There are certainly differences among the OSs when it comes to key security features like built-in anti-malware tools, sandboxing, system protection and codesigning. Is one OS clearly better than the others? Let’s see how they stack up.
Windows 10 comes with a free built-in AV-suite that gives most paid legacy AV solutions a run for their money. It is reasonably competent at detecting commodity malware through the use of signatures, YARA rules and reputation checks, although it will not protect the enterprise against more advanced attacks, and it is also subject to various PowerSh...
A sandbox is a closed or jailed environment in which a process is executed. The beauty of sandboxes is they protect the rest of your computer from untrusted processes, as the sandbox effectively prevents the process from reading and writing to other files, interacting with other processes or changing system settings. This is especially important fo...
Codesigning is an authentication technology that ensures that an application or process has come from the source it says it has come from. In addition, codesigning ensures that the executable, package or bundle has not been tampered with since it was digitally signed. Windows, Linux and macOS all make use of codesigning to some degree, though all p...
You want an OS with protection from rootkits and malware that tries to modify or replace the core system utilities, and in this category macOS comes out on top. Apple’s System Integrity Protection (SIP) is built-in and entirely transparent to the user. The effect of this is that even root cannot change some things – a situation many Linux power use...
As can be seen, there’s some variance in the main security features offered by each OS, but overall none is a standout winner or loser when it comes to features. Even so, adherents of one platform or another tend to have a favorite argument or two to back up their position. Let’s take a look at these and see how convincing they are.
Given that there’s neither an overall blend of technologies nor any knock-down argument that establishes one OS as “more secure” than the others, what is the best way to answer the question? Despite what some OS vendors claim, security is not a feature you can build in to an operating system for the simple reason that security isn’t a commodity tha...
Jul 23, 2024 · It’s super safe, especially if you know how to stay safe yourself, but Windows is arguably the least secure operating system. Even if it is very secure by historical standards.
- Jon Martindale
Aug 11, 2015 · The argument has been raging for years: which operating system is the safest when it comes to security. Has the latest software upgrades from the tech giants changed anything?
Windows 11 requires TPM 2.0 vs 1.2 because of the security advantages it provides, particularly support for newer and stronger cryptographic algorithms. The UEFI Secure Boot requirement ensures that a system boots with only code signed by either the device builder, the silicon vendor, or Microsoft.