There. I fixed that for you.
And just because slashdot is nice enough to aggregate stuff...
Slashdot | Two Trojans For Mac OS X
Slashdot | How to Save Mac OS X From Malware
Slashdot | Safari "Carpet Bomb" Attack Still a Risk
Slashdot | Foundations of Mac OS X Leopard Security
Slashdot | Mac OS X Root Escalation Through AppleScript
Slashdot | Attacking Multicore CPUs
Slashdot | Surprise, Windows Listed as Most Secure OS
No OS is secure. It is a common misconception that Macs are more secure than Windows. Macs are just as vunerable as Windows but, due to the smaller market share, are attacked far less and, due to OSX's use of the Mach kernel and BSD, has different attack vectors which fewer people are familiar with. Macs
would be more secure if more people understood what was going on "under the hood" (because the OS gives you the ability to see what's actually going on, unlike Windows) rather than going "hey, look at my super cool shiny laptop and awesome GUI". I stand by my assertion that people buy Macs as fashion accessories, not for their computing capabilities. Sorry, Mac owners but you either:
1. drank the Kool-Aid (fell for Apple's brilliant marketing hype and use of a "hip" contemporary actor)
2. succumbed to peer pressure (hey, all my cool college buddies have one!)
3. had an uncontrollable desire to appear cool/be different/stand out from the crowd and thought a Mac was the way to do it (the only time you should ever tell another guy that your "hardware" is smaller and lighter than his)
4. think computers are "scary" but the Mac is "cute" and it "just works". Pray that it never stops "just working".
At least OSX's GUI interface is a little more intuitive than Vista's (you can't right click folders in the default layout of the Start menu to add stuff?! /boggle)