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Symantec: Flashback malware still present on approximately 140,000 Macs

The good news: The Flashback malware’s infection numbers have gone down dramatically.

The bad news: About 140,000 of you need to look into removing the malware on your Mac.

Per a recent Symantec blog post, the security firm guessed that the number of affected machines would have dropped precipitously by now given that Apple and third-party vendors released their respective Flashback-neutralizing programs last week. The Mac maker even rolled out a removal tool for those Mac users who don’t have Java installed, and thus may be harboring a dormant version of the malware.

Statistics from Symantec’s “sinkhole,” or spoofed command and control server, show that Flashback has been removed from some 460,000 machines since Apr. 9, but the company expected less than 99,000 would be carrying the trojan by Tuesday.

Sinkholes are used by internet security and research entities to monitor and analyze the spread of malicious programs, though the standard practice sometimes brings unwarranted suspicion to smaller, less well-known firms. For example, Apple reportedly attempted to shut down the server hosting a sinkhole belonging to Flashback’s discoverer Dr. Web, mistakenly thinking that it was a legitimate command and control server. Apple’s move, however, can also be considered standard practice when dealing with fast-moving malware.

There has been no speculation as to why the remaining Macs haven’t already disposed of Flashback, as the self-installing program can be easily identified and deleted. It is possible that machine owners remain unaware of the program and haven’t yet performed a software update that would eradicate it.

The trojan itself continues to propagate on upatched systems. Analysis into Flashback’s structure reveals that it is coded to exceed the .com top level domain, and generates domain names from .in, .info, .kz and .net. Flashback creates one new string every day that is paired with a random TLD.

Once a user visits a site carrying Flashback, the program installs itself without the need for permission and proceeds to collect sensitive data like user iDs, passwords and web browsing histories which it then sends to an off-site repository.

Just as Flashback exploited the “Oracle Java SE Remote Java Runtime Environment Denial Of Service Vulnerability” to create its botnet, another threat has surfaced that uses the same hole as a means of distribution.

Called Backdoor.OSX.SabPub.a, the newly-discovered malware was created in March and is considered an “active attack” trojan as an operator manually checks and harvests data from an affected machine. SabPub has also been seen being distributed in malicious Word documents, installing itself by exploiting a known record parsing buffer overflow vulnerability.

Stay tuned for additional details as they become available.