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| Dr Web says most infected computers are in the US |
More than
half a million Apple computers have been infected with the Flashback Trojan,
according to a Russian anti-virus firm.
An investigation by Dr Web suggests that about 600,000 Macs have installed the
malware - potentially allowing them to be hijacked and used as a
"botnet".
It says
that more than half that number are based in the US.
Apple has
released a security update, but users who have not installed the patch remain
exposed.
Flashback
was first detected last September when anti-virus researchers flagged up
software masquerading itself as a Flash Player update. Once downloaded it
deactivated some of the computer's security software.
Later
versions of the malware exploited weaknesses in the Java programming language
to allow the code to be installed from bogus sites without the user's
permission.
Remote
control
Dr Web said
that once the Trojan was installed it sent a message to the intruder's control
server with a unique ID to identify the infected machine.
"By
introducing the code criminals are potentially able to control the
machine," the firm's chief executive Boris Sharov told the BBC.
"We
stress the word potential as we have never seen any malicious activity since we
hijacked the botnet to take it out of criminals' hands. However, we know people
create viruses to get money.
"The
largest amounts of bots - based on the IP addresses we identified - are in the
US, Canada, UK and Australia, so it appears to have targeted English-speaking
people."
Dr Web also
notes that 274 of the infected computers it detected appeared to be located in
Cupertino, California - home to Apple's headquarters.
Update wait
Java's
developer, Oracle, issued a fix to the vulnerability on 14 February, but this
did not work on Macintoshes as Apple manages Java updates to its computers.
Apple
released its own "security update" on Wednesday - more than eight
weeks later. It can be triggered by clicking on the software update icon in the
computer's system preferences panel.
The
security firm F-Secure has also posted detailed instructions about how to confirm if a machine is infected and how to remove the Trojan.
Although
Apple's system software limits the actions its computers can take without
requesting their users' permission, some security analysts suggest this latest
incident highlights the fact that the machines are not invulnerable.
"People
used to say that Apple computers, unlike Windows PCs, can't ever be infected -
but it's a myth," said Timur Tsoriev, an analyst at Kaspersky Lab.
Apple could
not provide a statement at this time.
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