Checkmate

The whole Symantec “fear-factor” article/stunt has brought the Mac world up-in-arms. I find it sad that most of the negative feedback come from people who are merely over-confident, or complacent… and do not know the real danger that may happen. It’s one thing to be confident in your system – hell even I am confident in my systems (both Windows and Mac), but quite another to expect them to be bullet-proof.

While again, the security architecture of the Unix framework is a formidable barrier for the most part, it still doesn’t mean that it cannot be cracked.

A post I read on a messageboard should put things into perspective:

Complacency will get you 0wn3d.. we should remember there are some fairly serious unpatched vulns still out there in the default install (e.g. iSync), and rootkits in development.

(For an explanation of the vuln, see: http://secunia.com/advisories/13965/. For a fix, see: http://www.drunkenblog.com/drunkenblog-archives/000411.html)

Are you sure that update/game/photoshop filter you just got from p2p is not a trojan that will rootkit your box and turn it into a spambot/kiddiepornserver etc ?

Do you know how to check ? Could you find out if it had happened ?

Since it is a local vulnerability, this is the type of thing someone exploits to completely own your box once they’ve gotten onto your system another way. Meaning if they have direct access to your system (i.e. using the machine themselves, or you running something that allows them access)

In the scenarios mentioned above, this is nothing different from running an infected program from a download, email, etc. The number of incidents involving these types of exploits may be rare, but they are out there. And Symantec’s argument would actually be valid if taken in such context.

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Oh really now?

It’s the Content, Not the Source

The Apple lawsuit really boils down to the definition of a trade secret, not the definition of a journalist. Commentary by Adam L. Penenberg.

via Wired News

No. “Trade Secrets” or “Journalism” are just words being thrown around to defend each position on a legal standpoint. The Apple lawsuit(s) really boils down to a company willing to crucify its very own supporters.

Boooooo!

Symantec: Mac OS X Becoming a Malware Target

Symantec: Mac OS X Becoming a Malware Target

Security vendor Symantec is warning that Apple’s OS X operating system is increasingly becoming a target for hackers and malware authors.’ They go on to warn that the only thing that’s protected Apple users from exploits so far has been the small number of Macs on the net. Now that people are buying Apple products for ‘style over function,’ according to one analyst, Apple computer has become a target for new attacks.

via Slashdot

The bummer here is that it was stated by Symantec, which easily could be construed as an act of furthering their own sales of AntiVirus software. But in general, friends and I have been discussing this before. That the reason OS X is said to be “secure” is simply because there isn’t enough interest in it for the malicious hackers.

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External audio for everyone

GM adds line-in jack to their cars via Engadget

GM line-in with the iPod
…See guys, that wasn’t so hard, was it?

I hope the rest of the automobile industry would follow suit so we can finally phase out those tape-adaptors, FM-transmitters, or spending quite a penny on modifying our audio setup just to accomodate external audio devices (iPods, etc.).

A line-in jack is pretty much standard to all audio devices, and now that I’ve read that bit of news, I’m wondering why people (including myself) never noticed that glaring flaw in automobile audio. You pay premiums to modify your car setup, or buy a BMW with iPOD support when a simple audio line-in could’ve solved that problem… and would not be limited to special audio gadgets such as the iPODs.

As the article said: it’s about friggin’ time!

NOW’s the time to try this

iScroll2 0.18

iScroll2 has just been updated.

via Joel’s blog

I posted a review comparing this little hack to SideTrack a while back, where the former failed dismally to oust the latter. But as I said in the past: it had a lot of potential. That potential already became a reality in its past releases, but the biggest hassle was it never saved your preferences… until now.

There’s only one problem remaining: making sure it doesn’t break on a OS system update. Other than that, for people interested in trying the hack out, I can honestly say that now’s the best time to do so. I’ve personally un-installed SideTrack for good in favor of this hack.