@rosyna A bug from a legit developer is not malware or an exploit. I think you’re misunderstanding what his point was.
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@rosyna So you’re saying that the reason the Mac App Store requires sandboxing is to protect against Flash, which most apps don’t use? -
@mjtsai No, it's to prevent bugs in the apps from being exploited and doing harm to other parts of the system. - View other replies
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@rosyna But, aside from your example of Flash, where is the code that’s exploiting these bugs? -
@mjtsai The bugs are in the apps. The malicious code is delivered multiple ways. Wikipedia has an article on RCE. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arbitrary_code_execution … - View other replies
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@drewthaler@mjtsai That actually happened to Twitter for Mac OS X a few years ago due to an image parsing bug. - View other replies
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@rosyna@drewthaler Even for things that would never be approved in the Mac App Store, so that every Developer ID app can be sandboxed. - View other replies
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@mjtsai@drewthaler That's exactly how sandboxing works today on Mac OS X. - View other replies
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@mjtsai Showing a random dialog in a legitimate app is very different from a malicious app convincing the user at launch. -
@mjtsai But that Apple documentation you linked to also says it's only for mitigating exploits.pic.twitter.com/OQTOH81vn8
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Michael Tsai
Rosyna Keller
Drew Thaler