You don't really need an antivirus for the Mac. As others have said, just run Malwarebytes periodically.Hiya All,
Many thanks for all the feedback, much appreciated 🙂
hhhhmmmm.... some more research needed then. Shame Norton isn't a instant "Yup install it, its ok" - Seeing as I am already paying for the package for my windows laptop already 🙂
Best wishes
Martin
I knew a person who was a developer for acertianpeornsite in 2009 and he stated that the sites had to be clean, virus free and fast, or they would not succeed and be shut down in a week. He explained how these site are based on competition and reputation on these sites are incredibly strong, safe and probably the best streaming on the the planet because there is too much money a site can lose in minutes if something goes wrong.
this was at the Jacob Javits Center at a web expo.
Bloatware junk.I've just installed Malwarebytes free. Thanks for the info.
With all this dislike for Norton here, how do you all feel about McAfee? My ISP (Spectrum) offers a "free" security suite from them.
You must not have any relatives with Macs because they manage to invest theirs with all kinds of malware. Viruses may not be a thing on Macs, but they still get malware.I'd do nothing, MacOS has a built-in antivirus called XProtect which receives virus definition updates frequently, it has received 5 updates so far in 2021.
IF i ever see this person again, i will relay this message to them!Those sites are full of malware, theft and abuses.....
You must not have any relatives with Macs because they manage to invest theirs with all kinds of malware. Viruses may not be a thing on Macs, but they still get malware.
At the very least OP, install the free version of Makwarebytes and let scan your Mac once a week or month. It only takes about 30 seconds to scan the computer.
Norton, McAfee, and Webroot are steaming piles of crap.
That is an analogy based on specious reasoning though, rather than probability.This debate—whether or not Macs need virus/malware protection—is always interesting, although folks say "I've never used one and never got a virus" doesn't hold water. Concurrence is not causality, and some anecdotal experiences don't really add up to evidence. "I text while crossing the street, and I've never gotten hit by a car" doesn't comprise a compelling argument for texting while you cross the street.
Again, I've had many situations in which family members and clients with Macs were absolutely in no way whatsoever protected by Apple's built-in defense measures. Yes, it's helpful, much like Windows Defender baked into Windows is "helpful" ... but it's not the end all be all of protection and doesn't safeguard against everything.The built-in program protects against adware as well, and contrary to Malwarebytes we can see what it protects against as there's a .plist file in the system folder with all the definitions, if you find that it's not cutting it for you then by all means take any necessary steps to safe-proof as needed.
You wouldn't expect a report that is put out by an antivirus company to say that you don't need their products, would you? On the other hand, I also have to question how the guys claiming they've never had a virus would really know it, if they've never scanned for one.The Malwarebytes 2020/2021 State of Malware Report makes a strong case for Mac malware protection.
Agree. I think, antivirus companies keep trying (so hard) to make Mac users believe there are virus threat around them, which fortunately (for us) hard to find. They won’t stop it as it is part of the marketing anyway.You must not have any relatives with Macs because they manage to invest theirs with all kinds of malware. Viruses may not be a thing on Macs, but they still get malware.
At the very least OP, install the free version of Makwarebytes and let scan your Mac once a week or month. It only takes about 30 seconds to scan the computer.
Norton, McAfee, and Webroot are steaming piles of crap.
Malwarebytes is a leader in corporate endpoint detection. Silver Sparrow, XCSSET malware, etc all target the M1. In fact, these malware developers are ahead of anti-malware companies in optimizing performance for the M1 chip!You wouldn't expect a report that is put out by an antivirus company to say that you don't need their products, would you? On the other hand, I also have to question how the guys claiming they've never had a virus would really know it, if they've never scanned for one.
I'm wary of the fact that Malwarebytes has a free tier at all, but I'd consider downloading it to run periodic scans. I run LittleSnitch to be aware of unusual internet-based activity from my computer, which would theoretically clue me in to virus activity (and also allow me to prevent it from communicating with the internet at all).
Antivirus isn't going to stop a user from doing something dumb.This I’d all a bunch of nonsense this day and age! Any Mac user should be worried about are Trojans targeting Macs! Agree to install software from a web site and You deserve to get hacked!
Zoom has changed that for so many of us!However, a lot of Mac users only install software from the Mac App Store. In those situations, I'm not sure anything but a good ad blocker is necessary.
Yeah, that sums it all up nicely and entirely echoes my experiences using and supporting large numbers of Macs over the years.Hi All,
A good You tube video on this 🙂
Good time for me to move to a Mac! 🙂
Good to hear another huge benefit of apple using their own A/M chips! 🙂
Best wishes
Martin