Malware

New Unpatched macOS Flaw Allow Hackers to Spy on Safari Browser History

Security Researcher discovered a vulnerability in macOS Mojave let malware apps bypass the privacy protection and read the safari browser web history.

macOS Mojave has strictly restrict some of the folder by default and it provide special access for very few apps.

But the newly uncovered flaw bypass the Mojave privacy protection and allow the malicious app to access the folder without any further permission from the users and system.

Jeff Johnson, A researcher who claimed that the flaw exists in every version of Mojave, including macOS Mojave 10.14.3 , a new released version on Feb 7.

In this case, the flow allows attacker to inject the crafted malicious apps to bypass the flaw and read the Safari browsers history.

Jeff said in his report, ” My bypass works with the “hardened runtime” enabled. Thus, an app with the ability to spy on Safari could be “notarized” by Apple (as long as it passed their automated malware checks, which I suspect would be no problem). My bypass does not work with sandboxed apps, as far as I can tell.

Jeff developed the browser extension called StopTheMadness that helps user to provide a smooth browsing experience in Safari, Firefox, and Google Chrome.

He claimed that, “StopTheMadness” extension never spy on you or your browsing history due to this privacy protection flaw and the bypass process uses a completely different method. Moreover, StopTheMadness is sandboxed.

He already reports to Apple regarding this flaw and got the automated acknowledgment but Apple doesn’t provide any bug bounty program for macOS flaws as we have seen earlier Zero-day flaw that was reported by Linus Henze.

There is no technical information available for this unpatched flaw since he reported to Apple in this regarding and waiting for the fixes and the bug to be resolved.

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