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Active4 years, 5 months ago
I have a computer running OS X, and I want to know if there's malware (e.g. a keylogger, or something that lets an attacker control my computer, or something that stops me from installing whatever I want) installed on the computer. How can I tell if I have something like that? How can I remove it if I have it?
A lot depends on the relationship between you and the machine - is it your own? Do you have administrator access to it? Since you mention that it's corporate owned, do you have an administrator that has ok'd a keylogger (for whatever reason)? It's possible (or, in fact, likely) you won't be able to remove it without drastic steps - specifically without re-imaging the machine with a known-good OS install. I don't know of any corporate environments where they'd let you do that.
Unfortunately, with a corporate owned machine, they're likely allowed to install whatever they want, and any measures you take to circumvent the logger may well get you fired.
Some things that you may be comfortable trying though:
It may be worth installing an anti-malware tool of some sort - from any of the big vendors Norton, McAfee, etc. - and seeing what turns up. You may be able to sell this to your administrator by pointing out that Macs get malware too, and that you'd like to be protected.
See if you can get chkrootkit to run, as most keyloggers are rootkits.
See if you can get Little Snitch installed; keep an eye out for anything suspicious. Any keylogger is only useful to an attacker if they can get that info out somehow.
Unfortunately, since a keylogger is likely to have revealed your passwords, etc. to an attacker, and is generally a sign of a relatively sophisticated attack - it's very likely that the logger itself has managed to get itself installed as a kernel module or rootkit and so even a clean AV sweep isn't an indication you're clear. You really need to consider that just wiping it may be your only option; start fresh and if you're worried about people you know breaking in, keep a close eye on the machine, keep it locked when you're away and keep your passwords complex and secret.
Bob WatsonBob Watson
This may vary across a lot of different consideration
Who's the owner of the machine
Who's the owner of your work time
Locals and country laws about privacy protection
Enterprise contracts who may precise limit of employee privacy
At all, I think trusting is needed for good work.
Nota: As keylogger act like a virus, first thing he do is to hide himself, so whithout strong computer knowledge and full access right to the machine, you can't obtain reliable information (whithout installing strongs tools in a computer that's not your..).
About what to do:
Ask your boss!
Trust your boss!
If really in doubt, without strong computer knowledge, don't try anything! If you're not the owner of material, everything you do could be reproach to you!!
If you think your boss lie and do illegal things, refer to police or syndicates..
Three possibilities anyway:
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Warning: This may by called spying or reverse engeenering! Both is illegal in many countries and could send you and your accomplice Best mac tool to draw on screens for web conferencing. to jail!!
Keep in mind: If it's not your, you don't have right to alter them anyway!
Install a linux bridge between your network connection and your Mac, dump all network traffic and submit the dump to a trusted friend.
Boot you Mac with a read-only live system which you can use for scanning your hard drive against rootkits and keyloggers.
The only real answer to both of these is to wipe the machine and re-install OS X. Technically, there could be some kind of hardware device recording your actions, but that is not very plausible unless you have highly valued assets (or unless you are a highly valued asset yourself).
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