What a kerfuffle.
Change to Linux or Apple mate.
The problem is not the virus, it's the host.... Windows
gg
The problem is not Windows, but the operator:
Why would any sane person click on an attachment or link that comes with an unexpected email, usually from an unidentified sender, with a useless topic!
I also keep receiving countless invitations to "send this to every contact". Yeah, right: That's how spammers get lists of valid email addresses when unsophisticated simpletons click on "Forward" and leave all recipients in clear text on the To: and CC: line.
Regardless what the "warning" claims about verification, it only takes one brief Google or Yahoo Search to find a link to Symantec, Urban Myths, or any of a dozen other sites to unmask the email as a hoax. In years, I haven't found a single such "warning" that was NOT a hoax.
In earlier days I tended to respond to the sender (if it was a well-meaning acquaintance) pointing out the folly. A couple replied with the standard "But it could be true, so I'd rather forward 100 warnings if only one of them helps a friend avoid getting caught."
Today, I simply "block sender" before deleting the cr@p.
PS Disclosure: I scan my email by the free AVG anti virus program; it has a small footprint.
Owning a personal domain name, I can easily add email accounts that are dedicated to specific contacts: e.g. accountw@mydomain for Westpac, accountp for Paritrade, etc; then I create a "message rule" that accepts emails for accountw only if they're from Westpac, etc; if they're from any other source, they're "deleted from server" and not even downloaded.
Result: For years now, AVG hasn't flagged even a single virus, Trojan, or other malicious junk.