Though the link was funny, I'll ignore the flamebait and answer the technical aspect of this post:

You yourself said that the OS is resistant against this sort of attack in the following quotes:

Well, password fields are "special" and are 'resistant' to key
logging, but you don't have to 'hook into' any apps to log the rest.


Note the quotes around 'resistant'. Password fields are not simply left open to key logging like everything else. Try it - write a key logger that logs all keyboard events on the system (you'll need Carbon). Then google around for the 'why'.

Whether it's bullet proof or not was neither asserted by my post nor defended by others. It's merely 'resistant' to key logging. There are easier ways of getting a user's passwords (say, from their keychain) if you've managed to sneak an application on their system.

I dont know what could be confusing about logging text that is displayed in a text field, perhaps you could elaborate on how this was confusing.

With the exception of the first misinterpretation (which was not a big deal, please forgive us our humanity), the OPs question was answered with several approaches: APE, AppleScript, and the Accessibility API. All are valid, all have advantages and disadvantages.

--
I.S.


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