New macOS vulnerability, “HM Surf”, could lead to unauthorized data access


Microsoft Threat Intelligence uncovered a macOS vulnerability that could potentially allow an attacker to bypass the operating system’s Transparency, Consent, and Control (TCC) technology and gain unauthorized access to a user’s protected data.

The vulnerability, which we refer to as “HM Surf”, involves removing the TCC protection for the Safari browser directory and modifying a configuration file in the said directory to gain access to the user’s data, including browsed pages, the device’s camera, microphone, and location, without the user’s consent. Apple released a fix for this vulnerability, now identified as CVE-2024-44133, as part of security updates for macOS Sequoia, released on September 16, 2024.

Read more…
Source: Microsoft


Sign up for our Newsletter


Related:

  • Hackers target Elasticsearch clusters in fresh malware campaign

    February 27, 2019

    Security researchers have observed a spike in attacks from multiple threat actors targeting Elasticsearch clusters, in what is believed to be an attempt to spread malware on victims’ machines. Attackers appear targeting clusters using versions 1.4.2 and lower, and are leveraging old vulnerabilities to pass scripts to search queries and drop the attacker’s payloads, according to ...

  • How to Attack and Defend a Prosthetic Arm

    February 26, 2019

    The IoT world has long since grown beyond the now-ubiquitous smartwatches, smartphones, smart coffee machines, cars capable of sending tweets and Facebook posts and other stuff like fridges that send spam. Today’s IoT world now boasts state-of-the-art solutions that quite literally help people. Take, for example, the biomechanical prosthetic arm made by Motorica Inc. This ...

  • Hackers abuse LinkedIn DMs to plant malware

    February 25, 2019

    Hackers are impersonating recruitment agencies on LinkedIn in a bid to target companies with backdoor malware. Researchers at Proofpoint found that the malware campaigns primarily targeted US companies in various industries including retail, entertainment, pharmacy, and others that commonly employ online payments, such as online shopping portals. In a blog post, the firm said hackers establish a relationship ...

  • 19-Year Old WinRAR RCE Vulnerability Gets Micropatch Which Keeps ACE Support

    February 22, 2019

    A micropatch was released to fix a 19-year old arbitrary code execution vulnerability impacting 500 million users of the WinRAR compression tool and to keep ACE support after the app’s devs removed it when they patched the security issue. Nadav Grossman from Check Point Software Technologies was the one who originally found the ACE Path Traversal logical bug in the UNACEV2.DLL library written by ...

  • DDoS Attacks Ranked As Highest Threat by Enterprises

    February 22, 2019

    US and EMEA security professionals interviewed by the Neustar International Security Council (NISC) in January 2019 said that DDoS attacks are perceived as the highest threat to their organizations, with roughly half of their companies having been attacked in 2018. Another 75% of all professionals who took part in NISC’s study said that they are deeply concerned about “bot ...

  • Spectre vulnerabilities cannot be mitigated by software alone

    February 19, 2019

    A team of Google researchers has demonstrated the Spectre vulnerabilities present in many of today’s processors cannot be completely mitigated by applying software fixes, as has been assumed. Variants of the Spectre flaw discovered last year, which involves information leaking via ‘speculative execution’ or functions performed early to speed up computation, are not just software glitches ...