Linked by Thom Holwerda on Fri 20th Mar 2009 13:51 UTC, submitted by google_ninja
Privacy, Security, Encryption Fresh from winning the PWN2OWN contest yesterday, Charlie Miller has been interviewed by ZDNet. He talks about how Mac OS X is a very simple operating system to exploit due to the lack of any form of anti-exploit features. He also explains that the underlying operating system is much more important in creating a successful exploit than the bowser, why Chrome is so hard to hack, and many other things.
Permalink for comment 354181
To read all comments associated with this story, please click here.
RE[2]: Operating System Security
by MobyTurbo on Fri 20th Mar 2009 18:54 UTC in reply to "RE: Operating System Security"
MobyTurbo
Member since:
2005-07-08

OpenBSD had those security features first, but OS X has relatively few of them; Unix does not have the same level of security for all it's variants, and in fact, other than the fact that you don't run as root most of the time, Unix is not all that secure an operating system unless the flavor adds additional security features and run secure programs. (Note how many remote root security bugs there were in sendmail(1) for example, running on the typical non-OpenBSD *BSD.) Oh well, at least Safari isn't in the kernel and used throughout the OS by programs via DLLs like Internet Explorer, if it was, OS X would *really* be in trouble.

Reply Parent Score: 0