OMG not my mac!

http://www.businessweek.com/ap/financialnews/D8SL7DL00.htm

Online crooks target Macs with porn ruse

   				By JORDAN ROBERTSON

  		 				 				SAN FRANCISCO      

In a backhanded compliment to Apple Inc., online criminals are apparently so impressed with its scorching sales they are sending Macintosh computers an attack typically aimed at machines running Microsoft Corp.'s dominant Windows operating system.
Symantec Corp. researchers said the Web sites serving up the new attack also deploy a Windows version.
“For a while Mac users have enjoyed the benefits of being a small enough population that hackers didn’t go after them directly – that’s obviously now changing,” said Ben Greenbaum, senior research manager at Symantec Security Response.
Lynn Fox, an Apple spokeswoman, said the Cupertino-based company knows about the threat and urges Mac users to be careful about where they download things from.
“Apple has a great track record for keeping Mac OS X users secure, and as always, we encourage people to install software only from trusted sources,” she said in a statement.
Online porn-hunters are the intended victim of the latest ploy, in which visitors to certain explicit Web sites are led to believe they’re downloading a free video player when in fact they’re installing malicious code onto their Macs.
Once the user authorizes the transaction, the fraudsters can redirect his future browsing to fraudulent Web sites and possibly to steal his information or passwords or simply send ads for other pornographic Web sites and rake in advertising dollars.
For example, a person using an infected computer may think he is going to online auctioneer eBay Inc. or its PayPal electronic payment division but actually be directed to a site that looks legitimate but exists to purloin personal information.
The attack does not target a vulnerability in the Macintosh operating system.
Instead, it requires a user to approve the download, then enter his computer’s administrator’s password to continue, operations that raise red flags among sophisticated computer users.
Symantec researchers said the Trojan used in the attack is a rejiggered version of one that’s been around for a couple years and requires that victims fall for a social engineering trick to work.
Security researchers at Intego, which makes Macintosh antivirus software and discovered the scheme this week, said it underscores the mounting threats to Mac users as the machines grow in popularity.
Windows machines still dominate the PC market, but Apple, which for years commanded just 2 to 3 percent of the U.S. market, has now grown to command an 8 percent chunk, according to market researcher Gartner Inc.
“This is the first really malicious criminal malware (for Macs),” said Intego spokesman Peter James. “We’ve seen some proof-of-concept malware, we’ve seen some worms, but this is different.”

I think its funny that Mac users run windows on their machines at all. Doesn’t that kinda defeat the purpose?

Also interesting was the 8% of the market Apple has. I thought it was 15%? Or is that worldwide, and not just the U.S?

[quote=“TgDn32"”]

http://www.businessweek.com/ap/financialnews/D8SL7DL00.htm

I think its funny that Mac users run windows on their machines at all. Doesn’t that kinda defeat the purpose?

[/quote]

no

it shouldn’t even look at the mac partition/file system and vice versa. IF one gets corrupted, it shouldn’t effect the other. Same as dual booting any OS that uses a completely different file structure (I guess… unless the virii was written that way in specific)

not sure on the market share numbers though

This is nothing like a windows virus; You have to download the dmg, mount it, open the installer, put in your adminitrative password, and then all it does is change your DNS settings to route you through a blackhat server.

Overblown media hype

Yeah seriously. You would have to be a completely inept, porn-addict, that has trouble getting out of bed every morning without impaling their eye on a pillow, and shitting themselves at the same time. For this to even be an issue.

That said it will come someday, but this is no more deadly than the “sneaker-net” viruses of past.

Enough with the Mac/PC hate. Can’t we all just get along. :slight_smile:

[quote=“FuzzyFish,post:4,topic:38027"”]

Enough with the Mac/PC hate. Can’t we all just get along. :slight_smile:

[/quote]

Yea, seriously…

Suposedly its the mac users causing all the problems? Every time someone who thinks they know what a computer is sees me using a mac, theyre like OMFG, HOW DO YOU USE THAT POS? THATS SUCH A SHITTY OPERATING SYSTEM, I HATE MAC’S.

Ugh… WTF people, use windows, ill use os x… ok?

Great…

i’ll use both and tell anyone that has a bug up their ass in either direction to diaf

As stated before, user intelligence is platform independent.

Classic example of PEBKAC

^^

or the ID 10T problem.