Vulnerabilities

Apple Releases Patch for OS X Vulnerability Exploited in the Wild

Apple Releases Security Updates for OS X, iOS, Safari, OS X Server

Apple released on Thursday security updates for OS X, iOS, Safari and OS X Server. The updates are designed to patch well over 100 vulnerabilities, including the recently disclosed local privilege escalation zero-day.

<p style="text-align: center;"><strong><span><span>Apple Releases Security Updates for OS X, iOS, Safari, OS X Server</span></span></strong></p><p><strong><span><span>Apple released on Thursday security updates for OS X, iOS, Safari and OS X Server. The updates are designed to patch well over 100 vulnerabilities, including the recently disclosed local privilege escalation zero-day.</span></span></strong></p>

Apple Releases Security Updates for OS X, iOS, Safari, OS X Server

Apple released on Thursday security updates for OS X, iOS, Safari and OS X Server. The updates are designed to patch well over 100 vulnerabilities, including the recently disclosed local privilege escalation zero-day.

According to an advisory published by Apple, OS X Yosemite 10.10.5 addresses a total of 135 security holes. The list includes issues affecting components such as Apache, Bluetooth, bootp, Data Detectors Engine, the date/time preferences pane, the Dictionary app, DiskImages, FontParser, groff, ImageIO, the kernel, QuickTime, sudo, Python, PostgreSQL, and various libraries.

Apple has also attempted to fix the local privilege escalation vulnerability (CVE-2015-3760) reported privately to the company a few months ago by the researcher known as “beist,” and disclosed publicly in July by German researcher Stefan Esser. The company says the flaw is a path validation issue in the dynamic linker dyld.

The flaw, related to the DYLD_PRINT_TO_FILE environment variable, has been exploited in the wild to install adware and other shady software on Mac computers.

Apple had fixed the vulnerability in the upcoming OS X 10.11, also known as El Capitan, but not in current releases. The company’s advisory reveals that the patch available for OS X Yosemite v10.10 to v10.10.4 addresses the bug through “improved environment sanitization.”

However, Esser noted on Twitter that “Apple released 10.10.5, fixed some bugs, and made another security problem worse than before.” The expert advises users not to uninstall his SUIDGuard kernel extension, which mitigates attacks leveraging the dyld vulnerability.

Apple has also patched a total of 71 vulnerabilities in iOS, including ones leveraged for jailbreaks. The security bugs fixed by iOS 8.4.1 affect various components, including Air Traffic, Backup, bootp, code signing, the kernel, ImageIO, Safari, and WebKit.

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It’s worth noting that some of the flaws addressed with the release of iOS 8.4.1 are the same as the ones patched in OS X.

A total of 26 WebKit-related vulnerabilities have also been patched with the release of Safari 8.0.8, 7.1.8, and 6.2.8.

Apple also updated OS X Server on Thursday. Version 4.1.5 was released to address the recently disclosed denial-of-service (DoS) vulnerability affecting the BIND DNS software.

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