Month: July 2016

Another Mac-specific Malware pops-up, but Apple’s Gatekeeper keeps it at bay

ComputerVirusSignA second piece of Mac Malware has been discovered.  This one could expose passwords and other information within the Mac Keychain.  However, the built-in Mac Gatekeeper feature 'kills it' before getting into the system.

Researchers at security firm ESET have been examining a new strain of OS X malware from an unknown source, and have published a breakdown of the so-called "OSX/Keydnap" package.

The malware is distributed as a .zip compressed archive, containing the package disguised as a text file or JPG graphic with accompanying icon. However, the file name has a trailing space, which by default, opens the Mach-O executable in the macOS Terminal.

After a double-click on the file, the Terminal icon appears in the dock, and very quickly closes. At this point, if Gatekeeper is active, the security mechanism pops up a warning to the user, saying that the file is from an unidentified developer, and prevents the launch.

If Gatekeeper has been configured by the user to execute all software regardless of source, the malware then downloads and runs the backdoor component which is executed at every reboot, replaces the Mach-O executable that the user clicked on with a decoy graphic or text file, and opens the decoy document in Preview.

The malware will seek root access, by waiting until another application launches, and popping up a dialog for user credentials.

After being granted root access, OSX/Keydnap can then be used by the owners of the a command and control server to hunt down the decryption key for the user's Keychain, and upload the stored passwords. Keychain-stored passwords include system passwords, as well as login information for Internet-based services, such as banking credentials, Gmail passwords, Amazon login information, and others.

To supplement Gatekeeper, an Internet connection monitoring application like Little Snitch can be used to examine incoming and outgoing Internet transmissions, and block undesirable ones, such as the download of the malware component in this case. Utilities similar to BlockBlock can continuously monitor for installation of persistent components vital for malware installers.

The revelation of the OSX/Keydnap package is the second Mac malware reveal in a week. On July 6, Backdoor.Mac.Eleanor was exposed, and is also easily preventable with properly configured Apple-provided security software, or by user awareness of the attack vector. AppleInsider was not able to obtain a sample of the malware to see if Apple's Xprotect has been updated.

The researchers at ESET note that they have no idea how the malware is spread, but spam email attachments are likely. Additionally, they have no count of active infections. Decoy images found during research point to the possibility of security researchers being a target of the malware.

The Alphabet Company is Crumbling

AlphabetGoogle“For years we’ve been treated to a few common memes from high ranking members of the technorati elite politburo,” Wil Gomez writes for Mac360.

“Apply is doomed. Microsoft is dying. Hardware will be free. Software should be free. At the other end of the scale, Amazon can do no wrong (even without profits), and Google will rule the world,” Gomez writes. “Well, a funny thing happened on the way to the future. It’s called reality. And in this reality Google’s daddy, Alphabet, is crumbling.”

“Well over 90-percent of Google’s growing revenue and profit machine is generated in 2016 just the way it was nearly 18 years ago when the company launched. Search engine advertising,” Gomez writes. “The Alphabet emperor has no clothes. That fact just hasn’t made the mainstream news yet.”

Read more in the full article here.

Apple Watch makes my life as a deaf-blind person much easier

AppleWatch-2“I have Usher Syndrome, which means I was born deaf and in the last ten years I have lost most of my sight. What I see in good light is like looking through a small letterbox,” Lady Usher writes for the Molly Watt Trust. “The bits out to the side and above and below are a white, misty haze. In dim light, or at night: I am almost completely blind.”

“Learning to live with sight loss, when you are already deaf, can be pretty inconvenient. The world just isn’t designed with deafblind people in mind. It’s the little things that are most stressful. The things that most people wouldn’t think of. There are dozens of small daily irritations that pile up, and erode confidence, until the least tiring option is simply not to go out,” Lady Usher writes. “My cane and my guide dog are brilliant for awareness and mobility. I wouldn’t be without either of these things, but they don’t solve the whole gamut of other stresses that deafblind people face. Now enter, centre stage – The Apple Watch!”

“If there was ever a good time to be losing your sight when you are already deaf, it is 2016,” Lady Usher writes. “Just three weeks after I got the watch, my guide dog and I entered a month-long team steps challenge at my work place. Together, we walked almost 200 miles through the busy streets of London, simply by following the vibrations of the AppleWatch and the simple on screen instructions. For the first time ever, it felt like we owned the streets. The whole of London has opened up to me for the first time since I lost my sight. ”

Much more in the full article here.

Microsoft begins Gold Master status for Windows 10 Anniversary Update

MicrosoftLogoMicrosoft has officially kicked off the internal sign-off process for the Windows 10 'Anniversary Update', which after several months of development is almost ready for the public. Internal sources have confirmed to me that build 14384 is the first 'release to manufacturing' or RTM candidate build to have been compiled and that we should have a final build ready for the public by the end of next week if everything goes well.

For those who don't know, the sign-off process is a phase of the development cycle where Microsoft compiles "RTM candidate" builds, puts them through some internal tests, and whichever build comes out on top is usually deemed the "final build" or "RTM" (although Microsoft doesn't like using the term "RTM" anymore due to the new Windows as a Service (WaaS) paradigm).

Regardless, the sign-off process can take around a week or so, with a best case scenario being a few days.

With build 14384 being the first RTM candidate (for both PC and mobile), it could of course end up being the final build. However, as build 14384 was only flighted internally this morning, it's too early to tell whether said build passed all the tests. We'll keep you updated, but if history is anything to go by, there'll be a few more RTM candidates compiled and tested before a final build is selected.

It's a super awesome time to be a Microsoft fan right now, with the 'Anniversary Update' almost ready for prime-time, Insiders can expect to receive the final bits at least a couple weeks before August 2 to test and submit feedback, making sure the final build is indeed good enough for the public.

Now that the 'Anniversary Update' is pretty much done with development, the focus is fast shifting over to Redstone 2, the next update for Windows 10 set for launch in early 2017. As I reported yesterday, my sources are telling me the latest internal RS2 builds are being compiled in the 148xx range, with plans to get RS2 builds out to Insiders by mid-to-late August at the earliest.

Source: WindowsCentral.com

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