Free software activist Richard Stallman has withdrawn an accusation that Apple's Mac OS X contained a backdoor after admitting there was no evidence to substantiate his earlier claims. . Stallman has repeatedly levelled charges that Apple could forcibly impose software changes in Mac OS X. He now admits his opinion was influenced by unsubstantiated gripes against Apple's operating system and that there is "no evidence that Apple has installed software changes without the user's permission." "We have no way to verify that there is no backdoor in Mac OS X that could install changes without permission, but that is no basis to claim there is one," Stallman writes in a post on his FSF blog on Monday. "I apologize for repeating a criticism of Mac OS which I cannot substantiate and must presume is false." The link for this article located at The Register is no longer available. . Stallman accepts that there is a lack of proof regarding his allegations that Apple's Mac OS X incorporates hidden access points.. Mac OS, Software Changes, Backdoor Claims, Open Source, Stallman. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
The release on Friday of Apple's Mac OS X 10.6, known as "Snow Leopard," has elicited criticism from security companies, which may have business to lose if Apple's latest operating system reduces interest in third-party security software.. Snow Leopard includes several security enhancements. According to Apple, Snow Leopard supports 64-bit applications, which the company claims are more secure than 32-bit applications because of the way the operating system handles function-passing. Mac OS X 10.6 also includes hardware-based execution control for heap memory, stronger checksums for preventing memory corruption attacks, and antivirus capabilities. The link for this article located at Information Week is no longer available. . Snow Leopard includes several security enhancements. According to Apple, Snow Leopard supports 64-bi. release, friday, apple's, known, 'snow, leopard, elicited, criticism. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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