Tips & Tricks


Mac Safari Browser Hijacked and Won’t Close

If Safari has been hijacked then use this method. The first step is to find Activity Monitor.

This app is in the Utilities folder in the Applications folder. Start Activity Monitor and find Safari in the list of running processes. Double click Safari and a window will open that will allow you to kill the Safari process.

In a Finder window, hold down the Option key while in the Go menu.
Go into the Library folder to the Saved Application State folder. Find the folder named com.apple.Safari.savedState and delete the contents. Restart Safari. Go to Safari preferences to the Privacy tab. Click on the Remove All Website Data button to remove cookies etc. Then go to Safari / Reset Safari and reset.

Make sure there are no strange extensions loading in your Safari Preferences.

Yep, Macs get infected

Malwarebytes Anti-Malware for Mac scans for and removes code that degrades performance or attacks your system. Making your Mac, once again, your Mac.

Click the image to be taken to the Malwarebytes webpage to automatically  download anti-malware utility. Copy the utility to your Applications folder and then run the utility.

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Use Multiple Unique Passwords!

How @Gizmodo Got Hacked and How You Should Defend Yourself

 EricLimer

If you follow Gizmodo on Twitter, you may have noticed our account started spewing some garbage last night. We got hacked. Here's how it happened, and some steps you can take to keep it from happening to you.

The weak link in the security chain turned out to be the seven digit alphanumeric password to our good buddy and former contributor Mat Honan's iCloud account. After presumably brute-forcing his way into iCloud, the nefarious hacker was able change the password and gain access to Mat's Google account, remote wipe his Macbook Air, iPhone, and iPad, get into his Twitter, and then use that to access ours. While we managed to snatch our Twitter account back from the claws of evil, Mat's been having a bit more trouble. You can read more about his harrowing tale on his blog.

As awful as getting hacked always is, it's a learning experience. So what can you do to help avoid a similar fate? A few things.

Use super-secure passwords and use different ones for everything. Use numbers, symbols, uppercase letters, lowercase letters, all that jazz. You probably know how to make a secure password, it's just annoying to do. If you can't be bothered to memorize a whole bunch of alphanumeric gibberish, pick up a password manager like 1Password orLastPass, and lock it down with one insanely secure (and unique) master password.

Whenever you've got the option, turn on two-step authentication, especially on your Google account or any other account you use as a hub. That way, even if script kiddies manage to get your (super-secure) password, it'll be useless unless they have access to your phone or computer.

Check up on and clean out your permissions from time to time. There's pretty much a 100 percent chance that somewhere in your web of accounts, something has access to an account it doesn't need to have access to anymore. In our case, Mat's Twitter still had access to ours. By going through and cutting these deprecated ties, you can make it less likely that one of your less used and possibly less secure accounts can help a hacker get to one of your more important ones.

Don't rely on the cloud. It's great to have online storage you can get at from all your various devices, but when the shit goes down and you're under attack, nothing is more secure than a hard drive you can unplug and hide in a shoebox in the closet. It's not the most convenient way to back up, but you'll thank yourself for it.

No matter what steps you take, you can't totally rule out the possibility of getting hacked; if someone's really out to get you, they can probably get you eventually. You're going to want to take every step you can though, just to be safe. If you do get hacked, you're going to be kicking yourself for every little precaution you didn't bother to take.

For any of you who saw any of the offending tweets last night, we're sorry about that, and we've tightened up security quite a bit. It's never a bad time for you to do the same. And show some love for Mat, who we hope will be back in working order soon.

Image by gualtiero boffi/Shutterstock