Vagabond said:
For the most part I agree with what you said. But, you also have to weigh the amount of time you are spending installing the security, updating your virus protection once a month.
If deployed intelligently very little time at all, and set to run automatically.
The time spent getting the security to allow stuff you actually want that it is blocking as spyware or whatever. In a business setting you might be blocking legitimate business and never even know you aren't getting it.
Again, this all depends on how organized your IT department is. Its sometimes all but impossible to manage because people don't understand, but security should be implemented as a cohesive policy. What programs and corresponding security access they require should be part of the deployment of security. And then modified over time as things change. This is in fact one of the things IT people actually get paid to do. And trust me, people still have phones, they still talk via email, if someone in an office wasn't getting something, they'd find out, and us IT folk would get an earful.
If you have something valueable and or irreplaceable on your computer by all means use security. Particularly if it makes you sleep better at night. But, just moving anything you don't want compromised or lost to a zip disk at the end of the day is probably much easier, less time consuming and certainly is far more effective than whatever security you are using.
Except that as time goes on peoples hard-drives get bigger, they hold more information, what people find important varies, from games to photo's and pictures to home finances, etc. If you have time to contiunally copy files to a zip disk everytime you modify them, then perhaps you have time to implement some simple, and one-time security measures.
The vast majority of people who are using security and virus protection are those who have no need for it, and aren't gaining ANY protection from it anyway.
I'll agree some people have overkill protection for the information they feel is important, however they do gain protection. To say they aren't gaining any is just patently false. Again, even if information isn't important persay, security measures can be worth it just so people aren't dealing with cleaning off their PC's all the time.
They are just falling for the drivel dished out by the companies making money off that crap. Since the chance anything like that will actually hit you is about zero. They appear to be doing what they say, when in actuality they are doing nothing.
Doing nothing? You'll have to back that up. And what do you mean by anything like "that"? Spyware? Mail worms? Pretty clearly these are not urban myths, companies do get hit by them all the time. If they didn't people wouldn't be able to cleverly mock Microsoft by typing it Micro$oft. Honestly, the threats are out there. What real harm they do can vary and can be overblown, but they still waste a lot of everyone's time by either clean up or yes, actual data loss. One way or the other you'll have to spend time either being overly careful where you go, or taking measures to protect yourself. Since these do actually do something, despite what you seem to imply, then their not necessarily a waste of time. Especially to professional companies.