Tag Archive for Macintosh

A History of Mac Malware: Part 2

A History of Mac Malware: Part 2Graham Cluley at Sophos recently wrote an excellent history of Apple Macintosh malware. He points out that Mac malware is a subject that raises strong emotions. There are some who believe that the problem is over-hyped and others who believe that the malware problem on Macs is underestimated by the Apple-loving community. The author writes that hopefully, this short history will go some way to present the facts and encourage sensible debate. (rb- We have just taken on a new customer which is 85% Mac and 15% PC. I have had this very conversation with my Apple certified tech who does the field support.)

Click here to read part 1 of the History of Mac Malware. Click here to read my recent series commemorating the 25th anniversary of the computer virus.

Sophos logoBig changes to the Mac malware scene arrived with the release of Mac OS X – a whole new version of the operating system which would mean that much of the old malware would no longer run. All future, Mac-specific malware would have to be written with a new OS in mind.

2004 – The Renepo script worm (also known as “Opener”) attempted to disable Mac OS X security including the Mac OS X firewall. The author reports that the Renepo worm would download and install hacker tools for password-sniffing and cracking, make key system directories world-writable, and create an admin-level user for hackers to later abuse.

Renepo script wormIn 2004, hackers also wrote a proof-of-concept program called Amphimix which demonstrated how executable code could be disguised as an MP3 music file on an Apple (AAPL) Mac. Amphimix appeared to been written as a proof-of-concept highlighting a vulnerability in Apple’s software.

2006 – The first virus for Mac OS X was discovered in 2006. OSX/Leap-A was designed to use the Apple iChat instant messaging system to spread itself to other users. As such, it was comparable to an email or instant messaging worm on the Windows platform.

iChatThe author concludes that it was correct to call OSX/Leap-A a virus or a worm. It was not correct to call OSX/Leap-A a Trojan horse. Not that that stopped many in the Mac community claiming it wasn’t a real virus.

2007 – Sophos discovered an OpenOffice multi-platform macro worm capable of running on Windows, Linux, and Mac computers. The BadBunny worm dropped Ruby script viruses on Mac OS X systems and displayed an indecent JPEG image of a man wearing a rabbit costume.

BadBunny wormThe first financial malware for Mac appeared in 2007. The OSX/RSPlug-A Trojan horse was first detected by researchers at Intego. Mac users infected themselves by downloading and running a fake codec that claimed to help users view pornographic videos. Once on a victim’s Mac, RSPlug changed that machine’s DNS settings so that, while browsing the web, users would redirect to phishing sites or sites containing advertisements for other pornographic sites.

According to Kasperskey’s Threat Post, RSPlug’s various incarnations are all forms of the DNSChanger malware. DNSChanger featured prominently as the target of the FBI’s 2011 take-down of the malware network, dubbed Operation Ghost Click.

2008 – Apple malware became more sophisticated in 2008. Cybercriminals targeted Mac and PC users in equal measure, by planting poisoned ads on TV-related websites. If accessed via an Apple Mac, surfers would be attacked by a piece of Macintosh scareware called MacSweeper. Close relatives of MacSweeper including Imunizator, claimed to find privacy issues on the user’s computer.

The author details the growing sophistication of Mac malware in 2008.

  • Mac scarewareThe OSX/Hovdy-A Trojan horse would steal passwords from Mac OS X users, open the firewall to give access to hackers, and disable security settings.
  • Troj/RKOSX-A a Trojan horse is a Mac OS X tool to assist hackers to create backdoor Trojans, which can give them access and control over your Apple Mac computer.
  • The Jahlav Trojan was similar to other malware campaigns, cybercriminals created a bogus webpage claiming to contain a video. Visiting the site produces a message saying that you don’t have the correct codec installed to watch the video whereupon the site offers you a DMG file for Apple Macs.

Ironically Apple issued a support advisory in 2008 urging customers to run anti-virus software – but after media interest, rapidly deleted the page from their website.

OSX/iWorkS-A Trojan horse2009 – ThreatPost reports that in 2009 Symantec found the OSX/iWorkS-A Trojan horse. The malware was added to a version of Apple’s iWork ’09 software suite that popped up on BitTorrent file sharing sites. The incident was noteworthy because the trojan was packaged with the actual iWork application, so the Mac users, many of which do not use an antivirus solution, would have no reason to suspect that their machines were infected because of the download. The trojan itself communicated with a remote server and was intended to scan machines for data and track Internet history and keystrokes. A new variant of the Trojan was distributed in a pirated version of Adobe (ADBE) Photoshop CS4.

Online video was a major conduit for Mac malware in 2009.

  • Sophos reported on how hackers were planting versions of the RSPlug Trojan horse on websites, posing as an HDTV program called MacCinema.
  • Hackers planted a version of the Jahlav Mac Trojan horse on a website posing as a portal for hardcore porn videos.
  • The Twitter account of celebrity blogger Guy Kawasaki had a malicious link posted onto it, claiming to point to a sex video of Gossip Girl actress Leighton Meester. In reality, however, the link leads unsuspecting users to malware that could infect Mac users.

Leighton MeeterIn 2009 Apple finally began to build some rudimentary anti-malware protection into Mac OS X. Although it wasn’t really equal to a true anti-virus product (it only protected against a handful of Mac malware, doesn’t defend you if you try to copy an infected file from a USB stick for instance, and doesn’t offer clean-up facilities), it was still encouraging to see some attempt to offer more protection for Mac users.

2010 – Throughout 2010 Mac malware was distributed disguised as a legitimate application.

  • The OSX/Pinhead Trojan (aka HellRTS) was disguised as iPhoto, the photo application which ships on modern Macs. The backdoor Trojan horse can allow hackers to gain remote control over your iMac or MacBook.
  • Boonana cross-platform wormA Java applet distributed via Facebook (FB) was used to target not just Windows computers but Mac OS X and Linux too. The Boonana cross-platform worm appeared, disguised as a video and runs in the background, and reports system information to servers on the Internet, which can be a big breach of personal information. The Trojan also attempts to spread itself by sending messages from the user account to other people through spam.
  • A piece of Mac spyware called Spynion (also known as OpinionSpy or PremierOpinion) came to light, attached to screen savers and other add-ons for users’ Macs. it’s a variant of Windows spyware that has existed since 2008. Spynion would take advantage of users not properly reading End User License Agreements (EULAs), allowing it to spy on browsing habits and search behavior.

In late 2010, Sophos issued a free anti-virus for Mac home users. Early reports indicated that there are plenty of Mac users with malware on their computers – some of it Windows malware, some Mac OS X, and some cross-platform. The author states that there’s no doubt that the Windows malware problem is much larger than the Mac threat, but that doesn’t mean that the danger of malware infection on Mac OS X is non-existent.

The events of 2011 would make it clearer to Mac users than ever before that the malware threat was real..

Related articles

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

A History of Mac Malware: Part 1

A History of Mac Malware: Part 1Graham Cluley at Sophos recently wrote an excellent history of Apple Macintosh malware. He points out that Mac malware is a subject that raises strong emotions. There are some who believe that the problem is over-hyped and others who believe that the malware problem on Macs is underestimated by the Apple-loving community. The author writes that hopefully, this short history will go some way to present the facts and encourage sensible debate. (rb- We have just taken on a new customer which is 85% Mac and 15% PC. I have had this very conversation with my Apple certified tech who does the field support.)

Click here for part two of this series. Click here to read my recent series commemorating the 25th anniversary of the computer virus.

Apple II1982 – Apple II – The first virus to affect Apple computers wasn’t written for the Macintosh (the original Mac did appear until 1984). 15-year-old student Rich Skrenta wrote the Elk Cloner virus, capable of infecting the boot sector of Apple II computers. On every 50th boot the Elk Cloner virus would display a short poem:

It will get on all your disks
It will infiltrate your chips
Yes, it’s Cloner!

It will stick to you like glue
It will modify RAM too
Send in the Cloner!

The blog says many Apple fans are surprised that the Elk Cloner boot sector virus predates IBM (IBM) PC viruses by some years. (I got my first paying tech job using an Apple II and PFS:File to build a database).

1987 – Macintosh – The nVIR virus began to infect Apple Macintosh computers, spreading its malware mainly by floppy disk. It was a similar story to what was happening in the world of MS-DOS malware, where viruses would typically travel from computer to computer by users sharing floppy disks.

Source code for nVIR was later made available, causing a rash of variants for the Mac platform. The author writes that the first anti-virus products for Mac, some free, some commercial, began to emerge in response th this malware. (In my first tech support Job, I got very familiar with the Mac 30/SE, since there was a computer lab full of them with a SCSI chain from the Mac to an external hard drive to a scanner. They also printed to a LaserWriter 2 with AppleTalk and Phonenet. I still have a bag of terminators.)

Mac 30/SE1988 – HyperCard – Running on early versions of Apple’s Mac OS, one HyperCard virus displayed a message about Michael Dukakis’s US presidential bid before self-destructing:

Greetings from the HyperAvenger! I am the first HyperCard virus ever. I was created by a mischievous 14-year-old, and am completely harmless. Dukakis for preseident (sic) in ’88. Peace on earth and have a nice day

1990 – The MDEF virus (aka Garfield) emerged, spreading malware on application and system files on the Mac.

1991 – HC (also known as Two Tunes or Three Tunes) was a HyperCard virus discovered in Holland and Belgium in March 1991. The writes that on German language versions of the operating system it would play German folk tunes and display messages such as “Hey, what are you doing?” and “Don’t panic.”

Microsoft Office1995 – Concept Macro Virus – Microsoft (MSFT) accidentally shipped the first-ever Word macro virus, Concept, on CD-ROM. It infected both Macs and PCs running Microsoft Word. Concept was not written with malicious intent but thousands of macro viruses were to follow, many also affecting Microsoft Office for Mac. Word macro viruses turned the world of Mac *and* Windows malware on its head overnight according to Sophos.

Macro viruses are written in an easy-to-understand macro language that Microsoft included in its Office programs making it. The blog says the macro language made it child’s play to create new malware variants. Most people at the time considered documents to be non-dangerous and were happy to receive them without thinking about the security risks. Just opening a Word .DOC file could infect your computer because the macro virus’s code was embedded within.

1996 – Laroux  Excel macro virus – The Laroux virus did not affect Mac users until Microsoft released Excel 98 for Mac and then Apple users could also become victims.

QuickTime logo1998 – Hong Kong introduced the next significant Mac malware outbreak the blog says.  It was first spotted in the wild in Hong Kong. The worm – dubbed AutoStart 9805 – spread rapidly in the desktop publishing community via removable media, using the CD-ROM AutoPlay feature of QuickTime 2.5+. (rb- An AutoPlay issue – whoda thunkit?). In the same year, Sevendust, also known as 666, infected applications on Apple Mac computers.

After 1988 Mr. Cluely writes that big changes to the Mac malware scene were just around the corner. The release of Mac OS X, a whole new operating system which would mean that much of the old malware would no longer be capable of running. Mac-specific malware would have to be written with a new OS in mind.

Related articles

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Apple Spoofs ‘Ghostbusters’

Apple Spoofs 'Ghostbusters'NetworkWorld posted a long-lost version of an internal Apple video, “BlueBuster.” The video is a spoof of the classic movie Ghostbusters. Chris C. Anderson at the Huffington Post explains that Apple (AAPL) spoofed “Ghostbusters” in a parody music video based on Detroit born Ray Parker’s song “Ghostbusters.” “Bluebusters” was intended as an internal promotional rallying cry in which Apple defeats the global domination aspirations of “Blue” aka IBM (IBM).

As Paul McNamara at Network World’s Buzz Blog points out, “It was clear that the metaphor of Apple as the liberator of the office worker wasn’t confined to the famous 1984 commercial.”

Steve Jobs BluesbusterAs prophetic as the theme of this video has turned out to be, we can’t help but grimace at a young Jobs decked out in a Macintosh inspired Ghostbusters Uniform. Aside from a resemblance to Harold Ramis, Apple CEO Steve Jobs doesn’t make much more of a splash in the video. And yes, Apple managed a “Bluebusters” spoof that ran the full 4:20 of the song.

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him at LinkedInFacebook and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.