Elinor Mills | Dec 02, 2008

Apple urges Mac customers to use anti-virus software, signaling a shift away from the long-time message that Mac users are immune to security issues.
(Credit: Apple)
In what appears to be a first, Apple is recommending that Mac users install
antivirus software.
But don't read this as an admission that the Mac operating system is suddenly
insecure. It's more a recognition that Mac users are vulnerable to Web
application exploits, which have replaced operating system vulnerabilities as
the bigger threat to computer users.
Apple quietly signaled its shift with an item titled Mac OS: Antivirus
utilities
posted on its Support
Web site November 21: "Apple encourages the widespread use of multiple
antivirus utilities so that virus programmers have more than one application to
circumvent, thus making the whole virus writing process more difficult."
The item offers three software suggestions: Intego VirusBarrier X5 and
Symantec Norton Anti-Virus 11 for Macintosh, both available from the Apple
Online Store, and McAfee VirusScan for Mac.
Brian Krebs,
who first
reported on the Apple antivirus recommendation Monday in his Security Fix
blog at
The Washington Post, said an Apple store employee told him he
didn't need antivirus software when he purchased a MacBook three months ago.
For years, Apple has enjoyed a period free from concern over viruses, while
Windows has been blasted with viruses that were written to make the biggest
impact by targeting the dominant OS platform.
Microsoft's software patch releases are watched closely by the entire
industry. The company overhauled its own software development practices and
constantly urges Windows users to install and update antivirus and other
security software.
Meanwhile, Apple's message has been that Mac users are immune to viruses, as
evidenced by
this
television ad.
It's unclear exactly what prompted this move at Apple. Apple representatives
did not immediately respond to e-ails seeking comment on Monday.
Dave Marcus, director of security research and communications at McAfee, said
Apple was reacting to the realities of the market, where Mac users are finding
they are not immune to Trojans and other Web-based malware that malicious
hackers write to steal data from computers.
"Apple is realizing that malware these days is targeting data, and valuable
data exists just as much on an OS platform that is a Mac as it does on an OS
platform that is Windows," he said.
Threats to applications are rising while exploits of operating system
weaknesses are declining. Operating system vulnerabilities representing about 6
percent of disclosed vulnerabilities while more than 90 percent of
vulnerabilities were found in applications, according to a Microsoft security report from last
month.
Trojans that are secretly dropped on a computer from a malicious Web site are
the most prevalent malware threat. In April,
Microsoft reported a big spike--a 300 percent increase year-over-year--in the number and proportion of Trojan droppers
that its Malware Protection Center detected and removed.
"The malware we see today is Trojans, password-stealing Trojans," Marcus
said. "They are little apps that are dropped onto the machine to do something.
They don't infect files and copy themselves. They are looking for specific
information and they send that information somewhere else."
Trojans, which often masquerade as legitimate applications like video
players, exploit vulnerabilities in the application code or take advantage of a
weakness in the browser, and thus can be equally threatening to Windows and Mac
platforms, he said.
Although Windows is the more popular target, even for Trojans, there have
been Trojans that target the Mac, including one that targeted porn surfers last
year and one this summer called AppleScript.THT.
Meanwhile, the biggest targets for application vulnerability exploits are
Office and Internet Explorer, according to Marcus.
McAfee's antivirus software protects against viruses that target the
operating system as well as Trojans and other malware that exploit weaknesses in
the applications, "regardless of what type of way in it is using, via the
browser, Word or Firefox", he said. (Marcus, however, didn't agree with Apple's
advice to run multiple antivirus products on one computer, saying they would
fight for resources and could run into conflicts.)
A Symantec spokesperson provided this statement when asked for comment:
"Symantec has long encouraged consumers to use a security solution, regardless
of the platform, especially with the rise in platform-agnostic threats like
malicious Web sites and online scams."
The changing threat landscape from one where attackers try to worm their way
onto victim PCs through holes in the operating system to one where more attacks
are coming at computers through the applications and browser should change the nature of the Mac versus PC
security debate.
No platform can claim to be safe now.
"At the end of the day, they're (Apple is) advising people to be safe and
take precautions," Marcus said." That's a prudent thing to tell people in Web
2.0 world."
Via
CNET Blogs
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