There was some coverage
I suspect that the vast majority of Macs are using wifi rather than Ethernet nowadays, so of the subset of Mac users who were using machines hit by this only a fraction of them would have noticed.
More coverage is coming out today. The problem seemed to hit at the perfect quiet time for the press going into the weekend. At least this is actual Apple news, I'm sure we will be back to random rumors of how unreleased products have been renamed or how unreleased products lack ports pretty quickly.
And agreed on why it wasn't a big outrage event in the Mac community. OS X setup helps configure WiFi, many users probably have it set up even if they also use ethernet. Interestingly it did blacklist the Thunderbolt ethernet adapters too. Apple's support side probably had a number of people contact them. Warranty or no, people were likely advised of the support article above.
My home Mac Pro is on both ethernet and 802.11ac WiFi, so that it can take advantage of all the
Continuity features. The brief usage I had on the computer this weekend did cause it to pull down the bad update, leading to it switching over to WiFi as default. Later it pulled the fix down over WiFi and ethernet returned.
One theory someone on Twitter had: It was an accidental release intended only after 10.11.4 ships. It's possible some sort of security vulnerability is sitting in the current driver. This page will have an update once 10.11.4 exits it's current beta phase:
https://support.apple.com/en-us/HT201222