We have OS X El Capitan 10.11.6 system on our iMac. Are we safe to continue to us it to place orders and buy things from our iMac? We worry that is no longer safe since Apple stopped providing software updates.

Should we consider purchasing a new iMac for security reasons, since Apple no longer provides software updates for OS X El Capitan 10.11.6?

iMac 27", OS X 10.11

Posted on May 19, 2019 11:13 AM

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Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Posted on May 19, 2019 1:52 PM

Open the Apple Menu in the top left, select About This Mac, and post up the model year for your specific model of iMac.


An iMac of late 2009 and newer can be upgraded to High Sierra 10.13 at no cost, assuming sufficient memory and free space.


An iMac of late 2012 and newer can be upgraded to Mojave 10.14 at no cost, again assuming...


An older iMac can top out at El Capitan 10.11, and yes, you’ll be missing the enhancements in newer macOS releases.


It’s possible to avoid some of the browser messages around older security for a while, but that’ll get increasingly difficult as the other web browsers stop supporting the older releases.


Most folks get into trouble here with stuff they’ve added; free apps, optimizers, add-on security tools, add-on cleaners, fake Adobe apps, cracked apps, etc. And removing Flash Player (as was mentioned) and removing Java if either of those are installed (and are not being used) are common choices, as those apps have had various security problems, as well as being confusing around the fake pop-ups for installers and updates.


The biggest part of security that gets missed far too often are backups. Complete, current, automated, and preferably with some redundancy. Backups are your path to recovery from a breach, or from damage, or from hardware failures.


3 replies
Question marked as Top-ranking reply

May 19, 2019 1:52 PM in response to CHILLAXNiMac

Open the Apple Menu in the top left, select About This Mac, and post up the model year for your specific model of iMac.


An iMac of late 2009 and newer can be upgraded to High Sierra 10.13 at no cost, assuming sufficient memory and free space.


An iMac of late 2012 and newer can be upgraded to Mojave 10.14 at no cost, again assuming...


An older iMac can top out at El Capitan 10.11, and yes, you’ll be missing the enhancements in newer macOS releases.


It’s possible to avoid some of the browser messages around older security for a while, but that’ll get increasingly difficult as the other web browsers stop supporting the older releases.


Most folks get into trouble here with stuff they’ve added; free apps, optimizers, add-on security tools, add-on cleaners, fake Adobe apps, cracked apps, etc. And removing Flash Player (as was mentioned) and removing Java if either of those are installed (and are not being used) are common choices, as those apps have had various security problems, as well as being confusing around the fake pop-ups for installers and updates.


The biggest part of security that gets missed far too often are backups. Complete, current, automated, and preferably with some redundancy. Backups are your path to recovery from a breach, or from damage, or from hardware failures.


May 19, 2019 1:36 PM in response to CHILLAXNiMac

You can use a third party browser such as Firefox, Google Chrome, or Vivaldi which are still receiving updates which will help to keep you more secure than using an outdated version of Safari. Of course this only partially mitigates the security risks since the rest of the OS hasn't received any security updates or bug fixes.


It would help to remove Adobe Flash if it is installed especially if it is no longer receiving updates. Flash should not be needed by most people these days.

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We have OS X El Capitan 10.11.6 system on our iMac. Are we safe to continue to us it to place orders and buy things from our iMac? We worry that is no longer safe since Apple stopped providing software updates.

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