I know you're trolling me, yet still I find myself enraged
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I had a fake ransonware pop up a few months ago on my mac. I never want to have a taste of the real thing.
http://researchcenter.paloaltonetworks.com/2016/03/new-os-x-ransomware-keranger-infected-transmission-bittorrent-client-installer/Yikes. They still don't know how Apple's certification process was bypassed.
The two KeRanger infected Transmission installers were signed with a legitimate certificate issued by Apple. The developer listed this certificate is a Turkish company with the ID Z7276PX673, which was different from the developer ID used to sign previous versions of the Transmission installer. In the code signing information, we found that these installers were generated and signed on the morning of March 4.
Quote from: chronovore on March 07, 2016, 06:54:44 PMhttp://researchcenter.paloaltonetworks.com/2016/03/new-os-x-ransomware-keranger-infected-transmission-bittorrent-client-installer/Yikes. They still don't know how Apple's certification process was bypassed.QuoteThe two KeRanger infected Transmission installers were signed with a legitimate certificate issued by Apple. The developer listed this certificate is a Turkish company with the ID Z7276PX673, which was different from the developer ID used to sign previous versions of the Transmission installer. In the code signing information, we found that these installers were generated and signed on the morning of March 4.I don't know shit about how this works, but this reads as if the certificate was issued to the wrong company somehow.
I think I get it now. Made a couple of wrong assumptions. A Turkish company's cert was misappropriated and used to sign a compromised Transmission installer, which then made its way onto the Transmission homepage. Crafty.
Does the ransomware render Time Machine useless?
That makes sense. I usually just plug in my TM drive to backup a couple of times a week instead of leaving it in. Either way, in the past my sheer stupidity has lead to me deleting 'important' files enough times that anything I consider remotely valuable exists on three or four different HDs. Still pretty disconcerting that something I use so frequently is so vulnerable though