Most notably, the 'Flashback' trojan that spread last year was said to have infected as many as 600,000 Macs worldwide at its peak. Java vulnerabilities have been a common exploit used by malicious hackers looking to exploit the OS X platform. The Mac maker dropped the Java runtime from the default installation for OS X 10.7 Lion when the operating system update launched in 2010. Over the last few years, Apple has moved to gradually remove Java from OS X.
And as noted by MacGeneration on Thursday, Apple has again updated its OS X XProtect list, this time to block Java 7 Update 11.īecause Oracle has yet to issue a newer version of Java that addresses any outstanding issues, Mac users are prevented from running Java on their system. Department of Homeland Security had recommended that all Java 7 users disable or uninstall the software until a patch was issued.Īpple took action on its own and quietly disabled the plugin through its OS X anti-malware system. Oracle issued the latest update to Java earlier this month to fix a serious zero-day security flaw.
The recently released Java 7 Update 11 has been blocked by Apple through its XProtect anti-malware feature in OS X.