Operating Systems > macOS
Apple MacBooks, Wintel Notebooks Vulnerable To Wireless Attack
worker201:
The article speculates that Apple may have threatened the guys, but the author doesn't really know anything. David Maynor was contacted by Apple, and the author assumes they threatened him, which prompted him to remind viewers that OSX was not responsible, and use a 3rd party wireless card. But only David knows for sure. I still suspect that he's probably a pussy.
_kill__bill:
Yeah.
$10 it doesn't affect FLOSS drivers. I don't use wireless, too slow, but it concerns me that drivers are so flawed.
hm_murdock:
Here's the thing. The new Intel MacBooks and MB Pros no longer use Apple AirPort Extreme circuitry for wireless, and instead use Intel's circuitry designed for the Centrino. This means that the software is written by Intel. That would mean that by the strictest definition, the in-built WiFi is "third party".
There's a stupid semantic gotcha.
But in all seriousness, it's an issue. Whether or not Apple wrote the drivers is immaterial. They're very obviously part of the system, and if the OS' own drivers are flawed, then there we have a problem.
However, looking at the evidence: Identical vulnerability in Mac OS X, Windows, and Linux when using "third party" and in-built Centrino WiFi hardware and drivers; Lack of this vulnerability on PPC Macs running AirPort hardware and drivers (Made by Lucent); Poor writing on behalf of the original "journalist", I think it's safe to say that this is an issue with hardware and software made by a single source. Whoever supplies Intel with their WiFi circuits, whoever writes the drivers, or whatever.
Since the problems exist in Linux as well, which has drivers made by regular people who don't get to see the source code for the corporate drivers, maybe it's the hardware that's the problem.
Dark_Me:
Found some information that might interest you.
--- Quote ---Presumably the same attack works on the iMac and mini as well, since they both use the same Atheros part, and the same driver.
More likely: it doesn't. In the presentation, Maynor uses a "third-party wireless card". It looks like a ExpressCard/34 802.11 card, but the non-'Pro' Macbook doesn't have Express Card slots, and the card they hold is too big to be a USB device, yet the Macbook they use is definitely black.
Something is already smells like day-old fish.
--- End quote ---
Read it here.
piratePenguin:
http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=304420
looks like it's finally fixed..
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