I'm not saying that Pwn2Own necessarily describes the vulnerabilities are in the wild like that in such a dangerous way (though perhaps they are in a limited amount?), but given Apple's track record over the past few years at Pwn2Own, I think all it requires is OSX reaching the necessary critical mass on the Internet and we'lll start seeing such exploits in the wild. I hope for all the Apple users out there that this is most definitely not the case, but who knows - there are a lot of unknowns and it's clear that Apple doesn't give a damn about the users, whereas Microsoft does.Kmar wrote:
*Help
Does it completely stop? No. Is it another layer of scrutiny. Yes. You don't need to read through a blog post to understand the benefits of being proactive .
pwn2own .. yea, I know
http://forums.bf2s.com/viewtopic.php?id=123211
http://forums.bf2s.com/viewtopic.php?pi … 6#p3477266
However, to conclude that the results of any particular hacking event is the average is nonsense. The speed at which those guys take down a system isn't necessarily indicative of overall vulnerability.
I also don't consider Apple's total control of OSX a layer of security. If anything, it actually hurts them. Windows might as well be open source with the way it is scrutinized and reported back to Microsoft from the world at large. Microsoft has also shown that they're perfectly fine with people hacking Windows Phone 7 and Kinect (even encouraging it), because the hackers do a lot of research work that might otherwise have never been done at Microsoft. Microsoft has learned a great deal from the late 90s, early 2000s and has done a fantastic job, I think, in turning around not only its image but also how its business practices. Microsoft is still a large, slow beast, but it's getting quicker and smarter.
Apple meanwhile, seems to be turning into the Microsoft of yore. Now you can't even replace the main system drive on an iMac with a normal one because Apple is once again eschewing industry standards and going its own way. Sorry, gotten a bit off topic here, but I think these points are relevant to how Apple handles problems. Remember the constant denial about the iPhone 4's antenna problem before they finally caved?