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OS X flaw may leave Macs open to virus attacks

Apple says it is investigating a French security firm's claim that it has found a way to trick Mac computers into opening potentially harmful files.

David Becker Staff Writer, CNET News.com
David Becker
covers games and gadgets.
David Becker
2 min read
Apple Computer was investigating a reported security flaw Friday in its OS X operating system that could allow vandals to trick Macs into opening dangerous files, such as Trojan horses and viruses.

The flaw was reported by Intego, a French security firm specializing in Apple systems. The company said in a statement that it had encountered a proof-of-concept Trojan horse for OS X disguised as an MP3 music file.

"Mac OS X displays the icon of the MP3 file, with an .mp3 extension, rather than showing the file as an application, leading users to believe that they can double-click the file to listen to it," according to Intego. "But double-clicking the file launches the hidden code, which can damage or delete files on computers running Mac OS X, then (launches) iTunes to play the music contained in the file, to make users think that it is really an MP3 file."

Proof-of-concept bugs are typically created by security researchers to prove the existence of a software flaw. They exploit the flaw but don't do any damage. The OS X Trojan began circulating last month via a newsgroup posting.

Apple said in a statement that it was looking into the matter. "We are aware of the potential issue identified by Intego and are working proactively to investigate it," the statement said. "While no operating system can be completely secure from all threats, Apple has an excellent track record of identifying and rapidly correcting potential vulnerabilities."

In a bulletin released on Friday, Security software and services company Symantec verified the bug but said it posed no immediate danger. "This Trojan does not contain any malicious code," the bulletin said. "MP3Concept is a proof-of-concept Trojan and is not currently seen 'in the wild'--it is not spreading and infecting Mac users."

An Intego researcher said that exploit works by embedding a file with code written for Carbon, the OS X component that allows older programs to be updated to run natively in the new operating system. OS X's Finder application, which associates file types with appropriate applications, doesn't see the Carbon code and launches the malicious file.

A number of such spoofing exploits have surfaced for Microsoft's Windows operating systems, but Macs have been relatively safe from such exploits and other types of attacks. Apple released a security update for the latest version of OS X earlier this week.

Christophe Guillemin of ZDNet France contributed to this report.