Linked by David Adams on Sun 9th May 2010 03:54 UTC
Bugs & Viruses According to The Register, "Researchers say they've devised a way to bypass protections built in to dozens of the most popular desktop anti-virus products, including those offered by McAfee, Trend Micro, AVG, and BitDefender. The method, developed by software security researchers at matousec.com, works by exploiting the driver hooks the anti-virus programs bury deep inside the Windows operating system. In essence, it works by sending them a sample of benign code that passes their security checks and then, before it's executed, swaps it out with a malicious payload."
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RE[5]: Not that simple
by moondevil on Mon 10th May 2010 05:19 UTC in reply to "RE[4]: Not that simple"
moondevil
Member since:
2005-07-08

The impeccable record does not prove nothing in terms of security.

It like you saying to me that so far no one robbed your place, so it is very safe.

For me it only means that so far, no one bothered to write such malware to Linux, because it is not important as a platform. There return on investment is still too low.

Just wait when Linux gets even more exposure.

I also do use Linux and install lots of open source applications, but I also know that so far we had luck.

Reply Parent Score: 3