22 July 2010 17:45 GMT / By Paul Lamkin
Safari users - turn off your AutoFill option at once. It's probably on as this is the default setting.
9 to 5 Mac is reporting that by leaving the feature on, you are opening yourself up to a world of cyber nasties, just waiting to steal all of your details.
Jeremiah Grossman details how the security glitch happens:
"These fields are AutoFill'ed using data from the users personal record in the local operating system address book. Again it is important to emphasize this feature works even though a user never entered this data on any website.
"Also this behaviour should not be confused with normal auto-complete data a Web browser may remember after its typed into a form. All a malicious website would have to do to surreptitiously extract Address Book card data from Safari is dynamically create form text fields with the aforementioned names, probably invisibly, and then simulate A-Z keystroke events using JavaScript.
"When data is populated, that is AutoFill’ed, it can be accessed and sent to the attacker. The entire process takes mere seconds and represents a major breach in online privacy. This attack could be further leveraged in multi-stage attacks including email spam, (spear) phishing, stalking, and even blackmail if a user is de-anonymized while visiting objectionable online material".
The security flaw has been known about for a year now although it isn't yet clear why it has taken so long for knowledge to reach the public domain.
But you know now, so get it turned off.
Via: 9to5mac.com
Software, Browsers, Safari, Macs



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