New Mac Exploit Easily Bypasses Gatekeeper Security, Could Allow Installation of Malicious Apps - MacRumorsOpen MenuShow RoundupsShow Forums menuVisit ForumsOpen Sidebar
Skip to Content

New Mac Exploit Easily Bypasses Gatekeeper Security, Could Allow Installation of Malicious Apps

Apple introduced Gatekeeper in 2012, creating it as a method of protection for users against malicious threats by adding various layers of security during installation of Mac apps. The feature is intended to ensure that apps users try to install on their Macs are legitimate and signed by a registered developer, minimizing the threat of malware. But now, a security researcher has discovered a simple method of bypassing Gatekeeper using a binary file already trusted by Apple to attack a user's computer (via Ars Technica).

macbook_pro_15_imac_27
Gatekeeper is meant solely to check the initial digital certificate when an app is downloaded on a Mac, ensuring that the program has been signed by an Apple-approved developer or at least comes from the Mac App Store itself before allowing the installation to proceed.

"If the application is valid—so it was signed by a developer ID or was (downloaded) from the Mac App Store—Gatekeeper basically says 'OK, I'm going to let this run,' and then Gatekeeper essentially exits," Patrick Wardle, director of research of security firm Synack, told Ars. "It doesn't monitor what that application is doing. If that application turns around and either loads or executes other content from the same directory... Gatekeeper does not examine those files."

Even if Gatekeeper is enhanced to its highest level of security settings, the new exploit can take advantage of a computer. Once the trusted file makes its way past the security program, it can then execute a handful of other malicious programs attached with the rest of the installation and gains the ability to install malicious software such as password-stealing programs, apps that can capture audio and video from a Mac's camera, and botnet software.

The researcher who discovered the exploit sent news of it to Apple about 60 days ago and "believes they are working on a way to fix the underlying cause or at least lessen the damage it can do to end users." Since then, an Apple spokesperson has confirmed the company is working on a patch for the issue and has asked that the identities of the specific files used in the exploit not be disclosed. Wardle plans to showcase his research on the Gatekeeper exploit at the Virus Bulletin Conference on Thursday in Prague.

Popular Stories

macOS 27 on MacBook Pro

Apple Says macOS 27 Won't Be Compatible With These Macs

Wednesday June 3, 2026 8:29 am PDT by
During WWDC 2025, Apple revealed that macOS 26 Tahoe would be the final major macOS version for Intel-based Macs. macOS 27 will be compatible with Apple silicon Macs only, meaning that you will need a Mac with an M-series chip or a MacBook Neo with an A18 Pro chip in order to install the software update. Apple will unveil macOS 27 during its WWDC 2026 keynote this Monday, June 8, and the...
MacBook Neo on Yellow Feature

MacBook Neo is So Popular That Apple Reportedly Doubled Production

Wednesday June 3, 2026 9:24 am PDT by
On an earnings call in late April, Apple's CEO Tim Cook said that customer response to the MacBook Neo was "off the charts," and the popularity of the laptop has reportedly led the company to significantly boost production. Apple supply chain analyst Ming-Chi Kuo this week said he believes that MacBook Neo shipments to Apple were doubled from an initial target of 5 million units to 10...
iphone 18 pro blue%402x

iPhone 18 Pro: Dark Cherry, Light Blue, and Dark Gray Chassis Leaked [Update]

Thursday June 4, 2026 5:18 am PDT by
Update: Since publication, new information has come to light suggesting the images have been AI-manipulated and are not in fact iPhone 18 Pro chassis parts. The original article follows. The color options Apple is reportedly planning for the upcoming iPhone 18 Pro and ‌iPhone 18 Pro‌ Max have appeared online today in the form of images of chassis parts of unknown authenticity....

Top Rated Comments

Codyak Avatar
139 months ago
-Gategate
Score: 20 Votes (Like | Disagree)
cariacou Avatar
139 months ago
Your Mac has either a 14nm Samsung CPU or a 16nm TSMC CPU.

To check which one you have, please click on this link...
Score: 13 Votes (Like | Disagree)
139 months ago
There's a very simple way to avoid malware on any computer: Don't install anything you don't trust.
Score: 6 Votes (Like | Disagree)
139 months ago
I'm not particularly concerned about this "exploit". Anyone seeking to make use of it could just as easily put the malware directly in the developer-signed application in the first place. Why go through the extra steps of invoking additional applications when you can do it in the initial one?

The only thing that keeps the self-signed applications on the up-and-up is that the developer ID can be revoked for bad behavior - whether it's in the signed application or a bundled application called by it makes little difference if the developer is doing this intentionally.

The only real attack vector here is if an application is known to invoke "helper" executables, and someone executes a man-in-the-middle attack to create a modified distribution with the legit signed main application but with one or malware-infected helper executables, and then pass that off as a legit bundle. Possible, but limiting downloads to trusted/official sites will prevent that.
Score: 4 Votes (Like | Disagree)
garylapointe Avatar
139 months ago
I tend to assume that there are ways around all forms of security protection.
But the app store has always made me feel a little safer...

Gary
Score: 4 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Jess13 Avatar
139 months ago
-Gategate
Perfect haha.
Score: 3 Votes (Like | Disagree)