tbburg
NAXJA Forum User
- Location
- Scottsdale AZ
This is pretty funny. (Disclaimer: I'm typing this on a Mac Mini, MacOSv10.6.4)
Apparently there's malware of mac in the wild now. (would that be Itrojan? Iworm? Irus? )
The geniuses at the apple store are being trained on how to help customers with this new problem:
Link to article at gizmodo.com
On the one hand, Dell, HP, etc, aren't going out of their way to help clean infected PCs,... but,.. they didn't write the OS. Microsoft did.
Apple, on the other hand, should have a handle on software issues for their computers/phones/etc(you'd think, anyway)
Apparently there's malware of mac in the wild now. (would that be Itrojan? Iworm? Irus? )
The geniuses at the apple store are being trained on how to help customers with this new problem:
Link to article at gizmodo.com
You'd like to think that customer service is out to serve the customers (you), right? Not exactly! After an unusually broad spread of Mac Defender, a piece of OS X malware, Apple is telling customers they're on their own.
The order, straight from an internal memo to Apple's customer support reps, states the following "Not our problem, sucker" rules:
AppleCare does not provide support for removal of the malware. You should not confirm or deny whether the customer's Mac is infected or not.
Should not confirm or deny? Intentionally leaving a customer in the dark as to whether their computer has a virus seems pretty low. But is this next part lower? Hmm:
Do not attempt to remove or uninstall any malware software.
Do not send any escalations or contact Tier 2 for support about removing the software, or provide impact data.
Do not refer customers to the Apple Retail Store. The ARS does not provide any additional support for malware.
So even if a customer is sure their computer's infected, Apple wants nothing to do with these malware lepers. Keep 'em off the support lines, keep 'em out of the stores. This doesn't seem like a great precedent to set for malicious code landing on Macs.
On the one hand, Dell, HP, etc, aren't going out of their way to help clean infected PCs,... but,.. they didn't write the OS. Microsoft did.
Apple, on the other hand, should have a handle on software issues for their computers/phones/etc(you'd think, anyway)