Month: February 2021

First Apple Silicon Malware in the Wild

The first malware native to Apple Silicon M1 Macs has been discovered by independent security researcher Patrick Wardle.

Ex-NSA researcher Patrick Wardle has recently praised Apple for the security of its M1 processor, but even so has now discovered evidence of hackers recompiling malware for it.

Wardle discovered the existence of GoSearch22.app, an M1-native version of the longstanding Pirrit virus. This version appears to have been aimed at displaying ads and collecting data from the user's browser.

"Today we confirmed that malicious adversaries are indeed crafting multi-architecture applications, so that their code will natively run on M1 systems," says Wardle in a blog post. "The malicious GoSearch22 application may be the first example of such natively M1 compatible code."

"The creation of such applications is notable for two main reasons," he continues. "First (and unsurprisingly), this illustrates that malicious code continues to evolve in direct response to both hardware and software changes coming out of Cupertino."

"There are a myriad of [sic] benefits to natively distributing native arm64 binaries, so why would malware authors resist?" he continues. "Secondly, and more worrisomely, (static) analysis tools or anti-virus engines may struggle [to detect this]."

Via: AppleInsider.com

Maryland approves first state tax on digital ads from FaceBook and Google

Maryland has passed the U.S.’s first tax on the revenue from digital advertisements sold by companies like Facebook, Google, and Amazon.

The State Senate voted on Friday to override the governor’s veto of the measure, following in the footsteps of the state’s House of Delegates, which gave its approval on Thursday. The tax will generate as much as an estimated $250 million in the first year after enactment, with the money going to schools.

To read the rest of the New York Times article, click here.

Developers reporting major lockup problems with Xcode

Over the past few days, Apple's developers support forums have lit up over complaints about the current version of Xcode (Version 12.4 (12D4e)), the program that developers use to make apps for iOS and Mac, are having major lock up problems when trying to use the app.

The discussions center around the app frequently locking up and showing the "beach ball of death" when trying to even use the program.

Developer Satcol, who opened the discussion said:

After upgrading to Big Sur and Xcode 12.2, the app crashes every time I select the behaviors preference pane.

I can see the following error in the crash report:

Code Block

ProductBuildVersion: 12B45b

Crashing on exception: The window has been marked as needing another Layout Window pass, but it has already had more Layout Window passes than there are views in the window.

<NSPanel: 0x7f9a85f69130> 0x9ed (2541) {{545, 363}, {830, 552}} Behaviors enAnyone else experiencing this?

The 27 replies to this question keep growing, with most developers filing a bug report directly to Apple.  At the time of this writing, no comment from Apple.

Parler.com back online with new server and logo

In a statement announcing the relaunch, Parler also said it had appointed Mark Meckler as its interim Chief Executive, replacing John Matze who was fired by the board this month.

Parler went dark after being cut off by major service providers that accused the app of failing to police violent content… Despite the relaunch, the website was still not opening for many users and the app was not available for download on mobile stores run by Apple and Alphabet-owned Google, which had earlier banned the app.

While several users took to rival Twitter to complain they were unable to access the service, a few others said they could access their existing account.

Parler, which asserted it once had over 20 million users, said it would bring its current users back online in the first week and would be open to new users the next week.

Last month, Amazon.com suspended Parler from its web hosting service, effectively taking the site offline. Parler, on Monday, said its new technology cut its reliance on “so-called Big Tech” for its operations.

Via: Reuters

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