Apple is
in the process of developing a tool that will detect and remove the Flashback virus from infected Macs, the company
revealed Tuesday. An estimated 600,000 Macs, or the market equivalent of 8.5 million PCs,
have been infected with the Flashback Trojan botnet, which was originally
discovered last year. The botnet originally disguised
itself as an update to Adobe Flash, and infected machines when users executed
the program. However, while the original threat required user execution, the
current version doesn't require
any user interaction or passwords. Apple issued
a security update just a few days
ago, aimed at keeping Flashback off of users' computers, but now the
company is developing a tool for scrubbing the malware off of already-infected
machines. "In addition to the Java
vulnerability, the Flashback malware relies on computer servers hosted by the
malware authors to perform many of its critical functions," Apple wrote on its website.
"Apple is working with ISPs worldwide to disable this command and control
network." There is no word on when the tool will be available. While we
wait for Apple's update, the company suggests Mac users running Mac OS X v10.5
or earlier disable Java in their web browsers. Security
company Kaspersky has also developed a free tool for detecting and removing Flashback.
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