Once-fixed bug pops up again in Leopard's Mail
Apple plugged the hole in Tiger last year, but forgot to fix it in Leopard
November 23, 2007 12:00 PM ETComputerworld - Apple Inc. reintroduced a critical vulnerability in Leopard, the newest version of Mac OS X, that it had patched more than 20 months ago in Tiger, security experts said this week.
A bug in Apple Mail -- the e-mail client included in Mac OS X -- that Apple fixed in Tiger on March 1, 2006, has cropped up in Leopard, according to security researchers from Symantec Corp. and Intego Inc. Attackers can use the new-old vulnerability to hide malicious code in seemingly harmless file attachments and get Apple Mail to run the malware without warning the user, as it is designed to do, said Symantec in a warning to customers of its DeepSight threat management service.
The Heise Security Web site first noted the returned flaw and said attackers could disguise their code as a benign file -- a JPG image file, for example -- then exploit the file's "resource fork" to launch Terminal, the Mac OS X command line interface, which in turn would run a camouflaged code. The site even produced a harmless proof-of-concept e-mail attachment that demonstrated an exploit of the bug.
"On a current installation of the Tiger OS, Apple Mail issues a warning that the supposed image file is a[n executable] program and is to be opened with Terminal," Heise reported. "Apple apparently either did not incorporate this update into Leopard, or did not do it correctly."
Intego, the antivirus software vendor that earlier this month warned of an in-the-wild Mac Trojan horse, noted that Leopard's security system does not notify users as does Tiger's did. "The bug causing this has to do with the way Leopard manages [download] quarantines," Intego said in an alert. "The first time a user opens an attachment, Mail opens the file directly without passing through the quarantine system."
Apple patched Tiger to ensure that its e-mail program would warn users of unsafe files as part of its Security Update 2006-001, which was released last year.
Until Apple fixes Leopard, Symantec told users to use caution when handling e-mail attachments received in Mail. Intego gave similar advice: "It is important that users do not open attachments from unknown senders, especially those that come with spam messages," its alert said.
Read more about security in Computerworld's Security Knowledge Center.
Apple
Additional Resources



White Papers & Webcasts
Death to PST Files
Download Now
The Tangled Web: Silent Threats & Invisible Enemies
Download Now
Tape Killed the IT Guy
Watch Now
Forrester Consulting Mobility Study: Taking Control of Enterprise Mobile Device Diversity
Download Now
BRM: What You Can Do To Reduce Risk In Challenging Times
Watch this webcast now!
What IT Must Do to Support Employee-Owned BlackBerry, iPhone and Android Mobile Devices
Download Now
Web 2.0, Social Media and the Dark Web - A Web Criminals Paradise?
In this discussion, learn about the challenges of protecting your users from the potentially unsafe content hidden in the "Dark Web".
eGuide: Enterprise Security
Smart Security Strategies for 2010. Read now!
Disaster Recovery 2008: Reduced Costs and Improved Performance
How long can your Enterprise afford to be without your data? With an accelerated disaster recovery program, you never have to answer this...

