Macs have been capable of passing on more than bots for a very long time, so that's not news. The fact that this was brought to everyone's attention when the new iWork was released back at the first of the year verifies where the bots came from, but that's not recent news, either, and the gentleman stated that in his response to the blog editor. Of more concern to me, is the statement that "bots," themselves, are still not listed in several anti-virus protection software, for
any OS. As stated in this quote from the blog:
QUOTE
Taylor shared with me a copy of the code he saw being installed on the systems in the botnet -- a simple Perl script. He discovered the code last fall, and while it is clear from examining text strings within it that the program installs attack tools, the script itself still is not detected as malicious by any of the two dozen anti-virus programs in use by VirusTotal, a free online virus-scanning service
The main reason I don't think his is
just a Mac problem comes from another quote:
QUOTE
The botnet Taylor had tracked was created using a known security hole not in Linux or OS X, but in something that runs on top of the operating system. This is PHP, a development programming language built specifically for Web sites. By leveraging this PHP flaw, the attackers were able to seed the Mac systems with several tools designed to turn them into drones...
But this creates even more of a problem for individual computer users, PHP runs on a server, not on 'client' machines. Only a minute number of Mac users run a server on their machines, at least one connected to the interweb. So, about the only thing
any individual computer user can do is to scan for the code that will then be inserted into the PHP on some server.
Seems the real problem is with the PHP and server community, not the 'messengers.'
But none of that negates the fact that this is an important topic and threat to
all computers. The problem with Macs being that there are too many users still living in the cocoon of "Macs are invulnerable" myth. So, I still say, "Thanks for pointing out the comments from some experts!"