Mac virus: What you need to know, how to remove it
Apple
(CBS News) Apple Macintosh users have become vulnerable to the Flashback Trojan malware. An estimated 600,000 Mac users have been infected. We've rounded up some of the best ways to check for the Trojan horse and get rid of it.
What is the Flashback Trojan?
First thing to note is that Flashback is not a technically a virus, it's a Trojan horse. Both are malicious software, but the main difference is that a Trojan horse cannot infect other computers. Trojan horses typically seem like helpful software, but once installed they make your computer vulnerable to data theft or keystroke logging, among other things.
The Flashback Trojan, also called BackDoor.Flashback.39, was initially discovered as a fake Adobe Flash Player plug-in installer in September 2011.
Full coverage of Apple at Tech Talk
CNET: Mac Flashback malware (FAQ)
CNET: How to remove the Flashback malware from OS X
How to check your Mac for the Flashback Trojan
Dr. Web, who originally reported the number of Mac users infected with the virus, has an online tool to check if you have BackDoor.Flashback.39. There's also a program called FlashbackChecker available at GitHub. If you use the anti-virus program VirusBarrier, it should be able to check and remove the Trojan horse.
How to get rid of the Flashback Trojan
There are a few different ways to get rid of the Flashback Trojan. CNET has a step-by-step guide to remove the malicious software. There's also a removal guide posted by the Finnish security company F-Secure.
CNET has full coverage of the Flashback Trojan virus.
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Don't malign Adobe just because someone used the name of one of their products.
Knowing the strengths and weaknesses of the browsers is also a good idea.
For system updates and downloads from Apple, I stick to Safari as it has the proper file handling keys.
For those times I trawl the darker 'adult' corners of the internet, I use Firefox with NoScrips and AdBlock Plus add-ons for the robust security.
For general roaming and doing the social butterfly thing and reading news and adding comments, my main browser is Camino. Flash doesn't work too well with it, but that's actually a good thing as the last Adobe Flash update went too far into the OS X core services and it was unstable running in Safari. Camino does NOT have low-level core-services access and issues like java and/or java scripts (NOT the same, BTW) just seem to not be as problematic.
Still, as always, if an application you download or website you're on asks for the system password, and you're not 100% dead-certain of the validity of the site.. don't give it!
Regards,
I am temporarily using a p.c. and hating every minute of it.
I don't think Macs are better computers. I have come to the conclusion that Mac peoples' brains process information differently from p.c. peoples' brains. (And we Macs have a higher tendency towards sarcasm and auperiority complexes.)