

We all know that there is much much more malware written for Windows than there is for Mac OS X.

The OSX/Revir-B Trojan was discovered, displaying a political hot potato of a PDF as a distraction while it did its dirty work. This is just one example of if happening in real life, there have been plenty of others.įlashback is just the latest example of Mac malware follows hot on the heels of another Trojan horse for the OS X platform. Maybe now you can see just how easy it is for some folks to fall for this kind of trick. (Enjoy this video? You can check out more on the SophosLabs YouTube channel and subscribe if you like)

Here’s a video of another malware attack that tripped up Mac and Windows users, by duping them into installing a fake update to watch a sex movie of Leighton Meester: Similar tricks have certainly worked well in the past – against both Windows and Mac users. Of course, rather than the genuine Flash you would be installing the Trojan horse. It’s easy to imagine how cybercriminals could trick Mac users into infecting their computers with this malware.įor instance, it would be child’s play to create a website which pretends to show something salacious (“Scarlett Johansson nude video!” would probably do well at the moment, for instance) and then when you try to view it, you’re prompted to install an update to Adobe Flash. Sophos products, including Sophos’s free anti-virus for Mac home users, detects the Flashback malware as OSX/FlshPlyr-A.

Once in place, Trojan horse could allow a remote hacker to gain access to your computer or download further malicious code to your Mac. The OSX/Flshplyr-A Trojan horse (called “Flashback” by our friends at Intego, who first publicised it), is disguised as an installer for the popular Adobe Flash program. Mac users are once again being reminded to keep their anti-virus software up-to-date, following the discovery of a Trojan horse that poses as an update to Adobe Flash.
