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iPods Come Complete With Windows Virus
Posted by
ScuttleMonkey
on Tue Oct 17, 2006 06:29 PM
from the nyah-nyah dept.
from the nyah-nyah dept.
kaufmanmoore writes "Cnet is reporting that some video Ipods made after September 12th have the RavMonE virus loaded onto it. In Apple's announcement they take a swipe at Windows security and encourage Windows users to install anti virus applications."
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IT: Malware Distribution Through Physical Media a Growing Concern 141 comments
twitter brings us a story about the increasing number of digital devices reaching consumers with malware already installed. In this case, digital photo frames from three different Sam's Club stores were found to contain the same type of malicious code. We discussed a similar problem with iPods a while back, as well as a more recent situation with Maxtor hard drives. Quoting the Register:
"While a compromise at the manufacturer is the most likely scenario, ISC's Sachs also pointed to retailers as a possible point of infection. Returned products, which could have been infected by the consumer, are frequently put back on the shelf, if they are in sale-able condition, and attackers could take advantage of a store's poor digital hygiene, he said. 'Trying to (infect a product) all the way back at the factory — getting it through all the checks and balances — would be pretty hard to do,' he said. 'But doing it at the store, where there might be loose return policies, and (where) they put it back on the shelf - you are not going to get a million infections, but you might get a person from an investment bank next door.'"
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Hardware: Digital Picture Frames Infected by Trojan Viruses 174 comments
CR0WTR0B0T writes "The San Francisco Chronicle is running a story on viruses loaded into digital picture frames, similar to the ones we discussed at the end of last year. The difference is in the virus used: 'The authors of the new Trojan Horse are well-funded professionals whose malware has 'specific designs to capture something and not leave traces ... This would be a nuclear bomb of malware.' Apparently, a number of regular folks have hooked them up to their home computer and loaded the virus. And if you think you're too smart to be fooled, apparently the Anti-Virus software makers have not caught up to the threat quite yet."
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Just goes to show. (Score:5, Insightful)
Also shows... (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:Also shows... (Score:5, Insightful)
WARNING: OBLIGATORY CAR ANALOGY!!!
When I was a kid we were firing a golf ball out of homemade cannon and broke the neighbor's windshield. Crap, what was I thinking? I should have blamed Ford for not making their windshields stronger!
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Re:Also shows... (Score:5, Informative)
I heard (from a reliable source inside Apple) that the virus was preinstalled from the disk manufacturer when they formatted the drives. *shudder* You can see where this can go.
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Re:Also shows... (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:Also shows... (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:Also shows... (Score:5, Interesting)
Do they? Last I heard there was a "proof of concept," but IIRC even it required user interaction to propagate. I've never heard of a real, self-propagating, OS X virus in the wild.
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Re:Also shows... (Score:5, Informative)
NOTHING in the manual about "Oh yeah, if you plug this in to a windows PC we're running shit without telling you."
I no longer trust "blank" media, but what can one do? Plug the hard drive in to a windows machine and format it? Woops, already fucked your computer over, since Windows will helpfully immediately run and install anything on the disk. This is a failure of Windows with autorun being on by default.
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Re:Also shows... (Score:5, Informative)
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Re:Also shows... (Score:4, Insightful)
-jcr
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Re:Also shows... (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:Also shows... (Score:4, Informative)
However, they shouldn't be writing files to a filesystem to initialise the devices, they should be writing a version-controlled quality-controlled filesystem itself. And there's no point blaming the Chinese contractor, I'm sure they were just following the Apple procedure, sloppy as it is.
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Re:Also shows... (Score:5, Insightful)
What do you base this assertion on? How do you know how 'sloppy' the Apple procedure is?
Many are lambasting Apple because they didn't test every vendor-supplied microdrive for *windows* viruses/virii. They sold 7.7 million ipods, as I understand it. If we grant 'em 10 seconds to hook the drive up and test it - even automated; remember, these drives aren't exactly fast - that's 891 additional days added to that manufacturing model.
I'm not sure I believe that Apple should necessarily be responsible for a chinese manufacturer's choice of operating system for their production line.
In fact, in response to the many assertions that Windows is the pre-eminent choice in production line systems... I find it difficult to believe; in my direct experience with seven major production systems and indirect with ten or twelve, only two used Windows, and of them had as their purpose was directly testing production of Windows based computers. A pharmaceutical company I'm familiar with uses HP clusters; a local utility recently switched from SCO to Linux ( I love saying that! ); A PCB assembly machine I dealt with had embedded a BSD variant. A plastics manufacturer I'm familiar with uses Linux and DOS (!) because the hardware manufacturer doesn't want to fix something that's "not broken". I've never even *heard* of Windows being used in production systems anywhere but plants that produce Windows computers.
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Re:Also shows... (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:Also shows... (Score:5, Funny)
Yes except you need to READ the readme files for them to be an issue.
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Re:Also shows... (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:Also shows... (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:Also shows... (Score:5, Funny)
They would have, but the developers complained about having to use the IPod's scroll wheel to type all of their code.
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Uhh, What? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Uhh, What? (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:Uhh, What? (Score:5, Insightful)
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Windows Security? (Score:5, Insightful)
Holy appropriate analogies Batman! (Score:5, Funny)
Especially not when you live here [com.com]...
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Trying to push the blame to Microsoft (Score:4, Insightful)
Wow...trying to deflect some of the blame, huh?
Re:Trying to push the blame to Microsoft (Score:5, Insightful)
Hardly a whitewash.
Parent
secret weapon (Score:4, Insightful)
those apple people are genius'
Re:secret weapon (Score:4, Informative)
"Simply because MS can't do anything like this back to Apple."
Sure they can. Ship a version of MS Word with a virus embedded that targets Macs (yes they do exist, though the small market share makes them much less common). And if they are willing to bring back the Mac Internet Explorer, they can 'accidentally' leave open a security flaw that allows even more viruses in.
I think MS wins hands down as one of Apple's main selling points is that fewer viruses are written for Macs than for Windows. But the more stories that break that include the words "Apple" and "Virus" in the headline, fewer people will believe that and just stick with Windows (yes we can hold out hope that they will move to Linux, but I wouldn't bet on it).
Parent
This sounds a bit suspicious... (Score:5, Interesting)
Why is a Windows machine ever connected to an iPod during manufacturing? I'd think for a high volume product like the iPod, there would be dedicated disk duplicators to format/populate the drives, and testing would likewise be done with purpose-designed hardware. Using a Windows PC to do either seems like a crude, inefficient way to do things.
Re:This sounds a bit suspicious... (Score:4, Insightful)
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Re:This sounds a bit suspicious... (Score:4, Funny)
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Worst...apology...ever (Score:5, Insightful)
(emphasis added)
It's nice that they're "upset with themselves for not catching it" in the last part of that statement, but what's that first part in bold all about? Oh yeah, it's the part where they shirk complete responsibility for this by half-blaming Microsoft for the virus Apple introduced in its own hardware. It's the most half-assed way of apologizing imaginable.
In other news, rapists who blame their victims will now be in charge of issuing Apple's PR statements on their website.
Exploiting process weaknesses... (Score:4, Interesting)
Imagine the scenario: an unscrupulous individual happens across an unannounced vulnerability, and develops an exploit. Rather than building it into a worm/botnet replication mechanism, he finds a way to load it onto a consumer electronics device (mp3 player, flash drive, camera, etc) and lets the well-established merchandise distribution network take it from there. Weeks/months later, at a predetermined time, an attack can be launched simultaneously from hundreds/thousands of locations, and we have a nasty problem on our hands.
If they're making products for use with Windows... (Score:4, Insightful)
The simple fact is that they choose to make their device work with Microsoft Windows systems, and they are damned sure responsible for ensuring that their device will not cause problems with those systems, regardless of the flaws or vulnerabilities of Microsoft systems.
I quite like Mac hardware and software, and have previously been glad that they may be gaining market share, but frankly if they are going to continue to market themselves by making stabs at Microsoft (and no I'm not suggesting the virus was placed intentionally), rather than by marketing their products' strengths and features, I'm not so sure I will continue to feel the same way.
Re:Come again?? (Score:4, Insightful)
Seems like just another bad attempt at deflection.
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Re:Come again?? (Score:5, Informative)
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Re:Come again?? (Score:4, Funny)
Less expensive, maybe a little bit, but a Yugo is less expensive than a Ferrari too! Just look at how much more you get: FireWire! Magnetic power cords! Genius bars! And isn't it worth a few more bucks to make your factory snappier?
Besides, there are plenty of factory applications for Mac! There's AssemblyLine...
Super AssemblyLine...
*whisper* Photoshop...
</fanboy>
Parent
Re:Come again?? (Score:4, Informative)
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Re:Come again?? (Score:5, Insightful)
The number of Windows machines on production lines in China is staggering--and if Windows had better security, the spread of viruses and malware wouldn't represent such a massive threat. Simple acts like requesting permission to install new software, etc. would go a long way toward cutting this off. Windows, left to its own devices, happily installs crapware without user intervention or notification, and that makes it harder to KNOW when your computer has been compromised.
So yeah, Microsoft is dumb in this capacity, but it's still Apple's responsibility.
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Re:Come again?? (Score:5, Interesting)
Perhaps someone tested a prototype on an infected windows machine, to make sure some minor manufacturing change didn't bork the device. Then after working on it a bit they got it to work, copied the image over, and all of a sudden you have iPods being pumped out of the factor with a virus on them. Clearly just a guess, but if something similar to that happened and I was Apple I'd sure as hell be pissed that Windows lack of security caused my hardware devices to get factory shipped with a virus on them.
Note that this scenario is supported by TFA: "Joswiak said it was traced to a particular Windows machine in the manufacturing lines of a contract manufacturer that builds the iPods for Apple."
In that context, Apple has every right to be irritated. Either way though you're right, it's a pretty stupid PR move to make a comment like that. They should just apologize, fix the problem, and move on.
Parent
Re:Good job, Jobs! (Score:4, Funny)
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Re:Good job, Jobs! (Score:5, Funny)
Next PC vs Mac commercial, the Apple version:
PC is wearing a "boy in the plastic bubble" suit, wandering around with a bottle of Formula 409, obsessively wiping down everything he sees. Mac casually strolls up from behind and taps PC on the shoulder of his bubble suit. PC shrieks and starts spraying and wiping the suit. Mac asks what's up, PC starts babbling "Viruses...viruses are everywhere. Anything I touch might kill me. Never clean enough...never...clean...enough". Mac sadly shakes his head and wanders off.
Next PC vs Mac commercial, the Microsoft version:
Mac walks over to PC and offers to let PC listen to Mac's iPod. PC puts on the headset, starts tapping his feet and snapping his fingers, then suddenly flops onto his back, goes into convulsions, and dies. Mac slinks off the stage, looking embarassed and guilty. James Earl Jones voiceover grimly intones "iPods kill - buy a Zune".
Parent
Re:Good job, Jobs! (Score:5, Informative)
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Re:Cue the... (Score:5, Insightful)
Still, it does give food for thought. I can easily see it as an act of malice as much as a QA failure.
I recall a *brand new* Sandisk flash drive that loaded & installed its own software (including Skype, its own little menu system, utilities, etc.) onto my computer the moment I plugged it in.
How much would it be worth to a spammer/botnet group to infect the image that gets copied to all these devices? Enough to pay sufficiently large sums of money to subvert employees at the manufacturing plant?
It's still inexcusably sloppy of Apple, but my real concern isn't in the companies involved: It's that it will likely happen elsewhere as well. Flash drives, DVD's with 'extended' PC content... stuff like that.
Anywhere media with readable content is replicated can be a vector for viruses.
Parent
Re:Cue the... (Score:4, Insightful)
And before people start saying, "Well if it was Microsoft, we'd be jumping down their throats about this!" consider that Apple isn't exactly a company with a long history of security flaws [microsoft.com].
I do think that the statement "As you might imagine, we are upset at Windows for not being more hardy against such viruses" is absurd. If there
I guess Autorun on by default is another flaw in Windows, but I wasn't aware that USB devices would autorun by default. Are iPods presenting themselves as CDRoms now?
Seriously. People look at a company like Apple and they imagine that there's some middle-aged guy in a turtleneck personally checking every iPod and somehow he slipped up and missed this. Nope. It's some grunt in a factory somewhere trying to meet a quota, and of course they're going to cut corners. Apple hasn't screwed up yet--we'll have to see how they handle this situation to find out whether their actions are "inexcusable."
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Re:Cue the... (Score:4, Insightful)
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Re:How is it Possible to be Elitest AND Stupid? (Score:5, Funny)
Bad analogy. It's like McDonald's (no a) selling burgers infected with MCD, and then blaming the humans for being vulnerable to it. Except that unlike humans in the real world (who are all susceptible to MCD), the humans in this crazy analogy universe have a choice between different bodies: one that's not only vulnerable to MCD, but every other disease out there, and has to be constantly immunized against them, and even then performs terribly, stops breathing and loses conscienceness occasionally, and is ugly to boot; and a few other bodies that are naturally immune to every known disease, are stronger and live much longer, don't need sleep, and are very attractive. Only the idiots who chose the ugly, disease-infested bodies get MCD so McDonald's justifiably tries to assign them some of the blame for making a bad choice.
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Re:Upset with Windows? (Score:5, Informative)
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Re:Upset with Windows? (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:nah, this has happened before (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:twitter, please read this (Score:5, Insightful)
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