Linked by Thom Holwerda on Tue 3rd Oct 2006 08:32 UTC, submitted by Jon Mchitel
Privacy, Security, Encryption Computer code that exploits a flaw in Apple's Mac OS X was released over the weekend. The code takes advantage of a weakness in core parts of Mac OS X and could let a user gain additional privileges. Apple provided a fix for the error-handling mechanism of the kernel last week, but the exploit appears to have been authored before then. "It appears to have been written well before the vulnerability was fixed," said Dino Dai Zovi, a researcher with Matasano Security who was credited by Apple with discovering the flaw when the patch was released. Obviously anything but spectacular (since it's fixed), but it does raise the age old question: will the growing popularity of both Linux and OS X lead to more of these exploits-- possibly one that does get released 'in time'?
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RE[10]: Popularity
by twenex on Wed 4th Oct 2006 03:27 UTC in reply to "RE[9]: Popularity"
twenex
Member since:
2006-04-21

If you consider the Apache lead over IIS as a "joke", there goes your last shred of credibility.

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RE[11]: Popularity
by NotParker on Wed 4th Oct 2006 04:20 in reply to "RE[10]: Popularity"
NotParker Member since:
2006-06-01

If you consider the Apache lead over IIS as a "joke", there goes your last shred of credibility.

If you consider parked domains an important indicator of Apaches "superiority" over IIS, you are a joke.

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