According to a new report from GFI, an average of 19 vulnerabilities per day were reported in 2014, according to the data from the National Vulnerability Database (NVD). 7,038 new security vulnerabilities were also added to the NVD database in 2014. So which operating systems were the most vulnerable in 2014? Apple's Mac OS X and iOS, not Windows.
"It is interesting that although Microsoft operating systems still have a considerable number of vulnerabilities, they are no longer in the top 3. Apple with OS X and iOS is at the top, followed by Linux kernel," the report states.
According to GFI, Apple Mac OS X had 147 vulnerabilities in 2014, with 64 of them having a high security impact. iOS came in second with 127 vulnerabilities in 2014, with 32 of them considered high impact. Linux came in third place with 119 vulnerabilities, 24 of which were high impact.
Microsoft's Windows operating system was not as vulnerable as Apple or Linux, but still had their fair share of vulnerabilities in 2014. Windows Server 2008 had 38 vulnerabilities, while Windows 7 had 36. Windows 8 and Windows 8.1 both had 36, while Windows Vista had 34. Windows RT had the least amount of vulnerabilities with 30.
"2014 was a tough year for Linux users from a security point of view,
coupled with the fact that some of the most important security issues
of the year were reported for applications that usually run on Linux
systems. Heartbleed, for example, is a critical security vulnerability
detected in OpenSSL while Shellshock is a vulnerability that affects GNU
Bash," the report adds.
Source winbeta
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