Shlayer, a common macOS Trojan, received Apple's notary certification and place in the App Store -- twice.

Dark Reading Staff, Dark Reading

September 2, 2020

1 Min Read

Shlayer, a Trojan that infects up to one in 10 of all global MacOS systems, received a huge leg up in its infection campaign when Apple blessed an infected application as "safe" and gave it a place in the App Store.

Peter Dantini, a college student, initially discovered the signed software through a mistake in typing the URL for "Homebrew," a macOS package manager.

Dantini contacted Patrick Wardle, principal security researcher at Jamf, who confirmed the find and notified Apple on Aug. 28. Apple revoked the application's certificate the same day, but Wardle found Shlayer signed with a different Apple Developer ID on Aug. 30 and once again notified Apple.

Apple's "walled garden" has developed a reputation for keeping users safe from malicious applications. While the system has historically worked well, any application that slips through the system's defenses can quickly spread since relatively few macOS users see the need for anti-malware software.

Read more here and here.

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Dark Reading Staff

Dark Reading

Dark Reading is a leading cybersecurity media site.

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