XPost: comp.sys.mac.advocacy, alt.comp.os.windows-11
On Tue, 7/29/2025 6:22 PM, Joel wrote:
Alan <[email protected]> wrote:
On 2025-07-28 18:25, CrudeSausage wrote:
On 2025-07-28 20:40, Alan wrote:
On 2025-07-28 16:33, CrudeSausage wrote:
On 2025-07-28 16:16, Alan wrote:
On 2025-07-28 12:18, CrudeSausage wrote:
In another blow to user privacy...
<https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/security/microsoft-macos- >>>>>>> sploitlight-flaw-leaks-apple-intelligence-data/>
'Apple has fixed the security flaw tracked as CVE-2025-31199'
Back in March.
I can only imagine how much data has been acquired by criminals
before that was fixed.
You simply assume that knowledge of the exploit was widespread before
it was fixed, huh?
You simply assume that your beloved Apple is so excellent that they fix
problems before they even emerge, huh?
I make no assumptions.
I NOTE that the flaw was fixed MONTHS before the article.
It does appear that Apple fixed this early on.
Read the article again. It's a "fix and fix again" issue.
A second issue has arisen, as the Microsoft exploit team picks
at a competitors OS. Lots of companies do this, and it is
actually excellence-in-action because it "lifts everyones boat".
There is one guy in the Chrome team, who is excellent at
showing how Windows is not an OS :-)
Nothing to be ashamed of. If your OS has 500 million line of
code, your buggage is astronomical. Ask any CS graduate if
there is a "pure as the driven snow" company, and everyone
knows there is no such thing. Bugs exist. Everyone makes
them. And a community effort, where someone else fuzzes your
stuff, that's excellence. Mainly because some opposing
teams are just so good at it. when asked to fuzz *their own*
stuff, strangely they can't find anything. But that's the
psychology of the thing and how it works. Like if the team
had 20 players, maybe only one of the players is "attuned"
to a certain competitors OS and can beat the piss out of it.
This is good. Everyone wins.
It's the same with AV companies. They could have 200 people or
1000 people on staff. Yet there are just two people who
really know what is going on, and they solve the "new exploit"
problems. Without them, the product quality would slip
below the waves. Most of the thousand people on staff
are knob polishers, but someone has to answer the
phones in Tech Support. "Did you turn it OFF and ON again?"
The new issue will get fixed. But that result may not be
news worthy enough to earn someone writing news stories,
the "buck-a-word" they deserve.
Paul
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