By
Munir Kotadia
Wednesday, March 30 2005 09:43 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/security/0,39044215,39223793,00.htm
Just a week after Symantec caused uproar in the Mac community by warning the
OS X operating system was quickly becoming a target for hackers and viruses,
Gartner has warned businesses reliant on the Mac to guard against "spyware
infestations."
Martin Reynolds, vice president of the research firm's Dataquest
organization, said last week that although the number of Apple Computer systems
used in businesses is relatively small, just one vulnerability
exploit could cause trouble.
"The Macintosh installed base is relatively small, with only about 3 percent
of systems in use today running the Mac OS," Reynolds wrote in a research note.
"The Mac OS is also a harder target…However, it only takes one exploited
weakness to cause trouble," he added.
He said that a Mac-only worm would be unlikely to spread very quickly, but it
might be possible to create a hybrid worm that attacks both the Mac and
Microsoft Windows operating systems.
"If an infected Macintosh attempts to spread a worm, it will reach a system
resistant to that infection 97 percent of the time. A hybrid worm targeting both
the Mac OS and Microsoft Windows could be developed, but such an attack would be
difficult to orchestrate," Reynolds said.
He was also concerned that spyware
targeting the Mac OS could establish itself before its existence was widely
documented.
"Although it is almost nonexistent on the Mac platform today, problem spyware
could emerge. Spyware that exploits vulnerabilities can establish itself more
deeply in the system, becoming both harder to detect and harder to remove. Don't
assume that your Macintosh systems are immune from viruses and other
malicious-code attacks," said Reynolds.