Anyone Can Hack MacOS High Sierra Just by Typing “Root”

Look, we get it. Remembering dozens and dozens of different passwords for different sites is next to impossible. But that doesn’t mean you should be reusing your passwords. That’s just asking for trouble.

Security

1Corrected 11/28/2017 11:30pm EST to note that the short term fix for High Sierra’s security flaw is to set a root password, not to either set that password or disable root access, as this article had originally stated.

Wardle argues that those flaws might have been caught earlier if offered a “bug bounty” for information about security vulnerabilities in its desktop software, just as most other companies do. Apple does have a bug bounty, but only for iOS, not MacOS. “A bug bounty program is a no-brainer. Maybe this is something that will encourage them to go down that path,” Wardle says. “It’s crazy these kinds of bugs keep blowing up. I don’t know if I should laugh or cry.”

The face-palm worthy bug is only the latest in a disturbing series that have plagued High Sierra. On the day the operating system launched, Wardle found that malicious code running on the operating system could steal the contents of its keychain without a password. And another shocking bug showed the user’s password as a password hint when they try to unlock an encrypted partition on their machine known as an APFS container.

High Sierra’s “root” bug was first revealed by Turkish software developer Lemi Orhan Ergin‏, who says security staff at his company stumbled on the issue while trying to help a user get back into their account. “They informed me and tried on my machine too. And I saw the security issue with my eyes. That was scary,” Ergin says.

Reed also notes, however—and other researchers confirm—that it’s possible to block the attack simply by setting a password for the root user. If you’ve installed High Sierra and haven’t set a root password, you should do it now. In a statement, Apple confirmed the problem, reiterated that short-term fix, and promised a longer-term software patch: ““We are working on a software update to address this issue,” an Apple spokesperson wrote.1

The fact that the attack could be used on a logged-out account raises the possibility that someone with physical access could exploit it just as easily as malware, points out Thomas Reed, an Apple-focused security researcher with MalwareBytes. They could, for instance, use the attack to gain root access to a logged-out machine, set a root password, and then regain access to a machine at any time. “Oooh, boy, this is a doozy,” says Reed. “So, if someone did this to a sitting on a desk in an office, they could come back later and do whatever they wanted.”

As word of the security vulnerability rippled across Twitter and other social media, a few security researchers found they couldn’t replicate the issue, but others captured and posted video demonstrations of the attack, like Wardle’s GIF below, and another that shows security researcher Amit Serper logging into logged-out account. WIRED also independently confirmed the bug.

“We always see malware trying to escalate privileges and get root access,” says Patrick Wardle, a security researcher with Synack. “This is best, easiest way ever to get root, and Apple has handed it to them on a silver platter.”

In other words, the bug allows any rogue user that gets the slightest foothold on a target computer to gain the deepest level of access to a computer, known as “root” privileges. Malware designed to exploit the trick could also fully install itself deep within the computer, no password required.

On Tuesday, security researchers disclosed a bug that allows anyone a blindingly easy method of breaking that operating system’s security protections. When anyone hits a prompt in High Sierra asking for a username and password before logging into a machine with multiple users, installing an application or changing settings, they can simply type “root” as a username, leave the password field blank, click “unlock” twice, and immediately gain full access.

 

There are hackable security flaws in software. And then there are those that don’t even require hacking at all—just a knock on the door, and asking to be let in. Apple’s macOS High Sierra has the second kind.

Christoph Dernbach/AP There are hackable security flaws in software. And then there are those that don’t even require hacking at all—just a knock on the door, and asking to be let in. Apple’s macOS High Sierra has the second kind. On Tuesday, security researchers disclosed a bug that allows […]