![]() We decided to take a look at the MRT.app and find out for ourselves. The addition to MRT caused some consternation among macOS security enthusiasts as this nomenclature is unfamiliar to the wider macOS research community: what is the mysteriously named MACOS.35846e4? Were Apple discovering new malware and keeping the details from the wider security community? It wouldn’t be the first time they’ve been accused of such. XProtect merely received a bump for the minimum Flash player plug-in (now, minimum required version is 32.0.0) but otherwise added no new malware families, while MRT only added a single new malware family to its search-and-remove definitions, an item Apple designated MACOS.35846e4. With XProtect having hardly seen a significant update since March of 2018, there were high hopes that Apple were finally playing catch-up with the rounds of macOS malware that have appeared since XProtect’s last update.Īs it turned out, the updates were underwhelming on the one hand and curious on the other. So, when Apple dropped a couple of updates to MRT and XProtect last week, the macOS community raised a collective eyebrow of interest. ![]() ![]() ![]() We’ve noted before that Apple’s built-in security technologies have been missing some updates of late, and we weren’t the only ones. But what is this new malware family MACOS.35846e4? Find out on this journey inside MRT Apple’s little known malware removal tool gets a signature update. ![]()
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