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Apple security threats exaggerated, report reveals

Apple security threats exaggerated, report reveals

By:  John E. Dunn  On: 27 Jan 2010 For: Techworld.com 

Despite threats such as OSX.Trojan.iServices and OSX.Loosemaque, a recent report from security vendor Intego on threats to Apple Inc.’s Macintosh is far shorter than a Windows threat list would be. But Intego warns Mac users against a false sense of security and notes hackers prefer to target devices such as the iPhone

Apple Inc.'s desktop computers experience little malware, a review of 2009 has found, but this is partly because attacks are starting to move to the company's other platforms such as the iPhone.

 

 

According to A Year in Mac Security from software security outfit Intego, threats to Apple devices ratcheted up a gear in terms of seriousness, with a clutch of software vulnerabilities, Web site exploits and, as ever, sophisticated Trojans.

 

These included OSX.Trojan.iServices, which hid inside pirated copies of Apple's iWork suite and Adobe's Photoshop CS4 as a way of opening a back door into Macs, and continued with the return of an older piece of malware, RSPlug, which cropped up in variants throughout the year.

 

More in Infoworld

8 simple iPhone security tips

 

 

Later in the year, Mac users had to contend with the file-deleting OSX.Loosemaque 'virus' after a warning by Symantec Corp., but which turned out to be spoof game designed to raise moral questions about the de-sensitizing nature of computer games.

Intego goes on to document a number of vulnerabilities in OS X and May's massive 400MB update to patch 47 security issues to underline that the complacency of old about Apple security being good is sometimes misplaced.

 

Windows users will read the report with incredulity. An equivalent 2009 report for the world's dominant computer platform would run to hundreds if not thousands of pages - Intego's reaches seven including a one-page index of sources. Most of what passes for threats in the world of OS X would be laughed at by PC security researchers.

 

Intego has two defences. First, Mac users often explore the web with a naive sense of invulnerability and rarely seem to invest in security software from Mac-oriented security companies such as Intego itself. This makes them vulnerable even if the volume of threats is far lower than with better-defended PCs.

 

Second, the low number of security threats is mainly to do with it being a huge brand with a small global user base not worth criminals wasting their time on rather than any inherent superiority of design. Importantly, this might not always apply to Apple's other spin-off platforms such as the iPhone and whatever tablet computer Apple comes up with on 27 January, both of which could end up with large user bases.


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john e. dunn John E. Dunn is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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