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by feelix
3956 days ago
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Apart from that it doesn't get you any additional protection whatsoever. With all the root OS X exploits floating around that bust you out of the sandbox as well as giving you full system access, as someone that has several utilities on the Mac App Store, it would be trivial to put an app there that gets set off by a timer, exploits root, and wreaks havoc. Source: https://www.google.com/search?q=os+x+root+exploit&gws_rd=ssl |
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This protects against a whole host of issues. It safeguards against garden-variety incompetence[1]. It provides some defense against the large number of badly-intentioned people who can write an Objective-C app, but don't have the expertise necessary to weaponize a typical root escalation exploit. It prevents apps from accessing your contacts, reading your emails, determining your location, and accessing the webcam and mic without your knowledge, amongst other things.
Does it protect against a motivated, highly technical attacker? No, not really. But that hardly makes it useless.
[1]: http://www.macobserver.com/news/98/december/981229/bungierec...