Linked by Thom Holwerda on Tue 1st Sep 2009 14:53 UTC, submitted by waid0004
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...when you know about it...
The bug was closed on August 5, 2009 so the number of days the vulnerability was alive was 1599 days (4 years and 3 months).
If the first exploit was from June 2008 is would make it around 15 months. This is still too long, but to expect a "bug" to be fixed before it has been identified is just stupid.
Of course 4 years 3 months certainly sounds a lot worse than 15 months...
RE: A bug can only be fixed...
by tobyv on Wed 2nd Sep 2009 01:37 UTC
in reply to "A bug can only be fixed..."
RE[2]: A bug can only be fixed...
by kaiwai on Thu 3rd Sep 2009 05:39 UTC
in reply to "RE: A bug can only be fixed..."
15 months is still pretty bad considering how trivial it is to exploit.
Its amazing that one doesn't see that exploit; sounds more like a security 'expert' digging up dirt on the flavour of the month hoping that the Mac OS X name will raise his own. The flaw exists but why in 15 months hasn't there been a wide spread deployment of malware taking advantage on what appears to be a very simple flaw?



