Oops, Apple!

foxidrive

Retired Admin
For years, Apple has enjoyed a pretty good reputation among users for the security of its products. That halo has been enhanced by the addition of new security features such as Gatekeeper and XProtect to OS X recently, but one researcher said that all of those protections are simple to bypass and gaining persistence on a Mac as an attacker isn't much of a challenge at all. Gatekeeper is one of the key technologies that Apple uses to prevent malware from running on OS X machines. It gives users the ability to restrict which applications can run on their machines by choosing to only allow apps from the Mac App Store. With that setting in play, only signed, legitimate apps should be able to run on the machine. But Patrick Wardle, director of research at Synack, said that getting around that restriction is trivial. "Gatekeeper doesn't verify an extra content in the apps. So if I can find an Apple-approved app and get it to load external content, when the user runs it, it will bypass Gatekeeper," Wardle said in a talk at the RSA Conference here Thursday. "It only verifies the app bundle. If Macs were totally secure, I wouldn't be here talking," Wardle said. "It's trivial for any attacker to bypass the security tools on Macs."
 

misi

Growing Little Guru
You cannot hack a Mac!!!

"It's trivial for any attacker to bypass the security tools on Macs."

Huh? It's impossible!

Errr... Is it only a myth?

 

okeedokee

The Bastion of Belmont
I tried to install a non-apple app and wasn't allowed. Then I went into "somewhere" and changed permissions, and now I can install both apple and non-apple products. Being unable to do it is a default thing with apple; but it can be changed.
An attacker can get in anywhere, pretty much.
 

foxidrive

Retired Admin
I tried to install a non-apple app and wasn't allowed. Then I went into "somewhere" and changed permissions, and now I can install both apple and non-apple products. Being unable to do it is a default thing with apple; but it can be changed.

Yes, but the message okee was that if you were only set to get approved Apple apps then you were still vulnerable.
 
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