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Apple Security Breach Could Give Complete Access To Your iPhone, iPad, Officials Warn

AP/Huffington Post   First Posted: 8/4/10 03:35 PM ET Updated: 5/25/11 06:15 PM ET

Iphone

BERLIN -- Several versions of Apple's iPhone, iPad, and iPod Touch have potentially serious security problems, a German government agency said in an official warning Wednesday.

Apple's iOS operating system has "two critical weak points for which no patch exists," the Federal Office for Information Security said.

Opening a manipulated website or a PDF file could allow criminals to spy on passwords, planners, photos, text messages, e-mails and even listen in to phone conversations, the agency said in a statement.

"This allows potential attackers access to the complete system, including administrator rights," it added, urging users not to open PDF files on their mobile devices and only use trustworthy websites until Apple Inc. publishes a software update.

Gizmodo warned readers about the vulnerability on Tuesday. "Right now, if you visit a web page and load a simple PDF file, you may give total control of your iPhone, iPod touch, or iPad to a hacker. The security bug affects all devices running iOS 3.1.2 and higher," the blog wrote.

A spokesman for Apple in Germany, Georg Albrecht, told The Associated Press that the company is looking into the matter.

"We know these reports and are investigating them," he said, refusing to elaborate.

Although no attacks have been observed yet they were likely to appear soon, the German agency said.

"It has to be expected that hackers will soon use the weak spots for attacks," it said, noting that the devices' popularity could lead to attacks within the corporate world - possibly facilitating industrial espionage.

The security loophole became obvious after reports about a successful hacking of Apple's iOS operating system emerged on Monday, a spokeswoman for the agency, Katrin Alberts, said.

"Since then, information used in this hack is publicly available and can be used to infect an iOS device simply by opening a specially crafted PDF file," she told the AP.

The application targeted in such an attack, Alberts noted, is not Adobe Systems Inc.'s Acrobat reader which allows users to view PDF files, but Apple's internal application for opening those files on its iOS devices.

"We decided to communicate this proactively because a potential attacker may gain access to the entire device," Alberts said.

The federal agency, based in Bonn, said it was in contact with Apple on the issue. The warning relates to iPhones using iOS versions 3.1.2-4.0.1., iPads using iOS 3.2-3.2.1 and iPods Touch using iOS 3.1.2.-4.0.

The agency said it was possible but not clear whether older iOS or iPhone OS versions could also be affected.

With their mobile devices, users should not only stay clear of PDF files they get by e-mail, but also of those found via search engines, as they could be infected, Alberts said.

In the worst case, attackers could get hold of passwords, banking and other personal data. A user's contacts could also be used for sending spam e-mails, she said.

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03:24 AM on 08/11/2010
to be welcome baidu
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
pjwrites
09:55 AM on 08/05/2010
Don't they have an app for that?
07:37 AM on 08/05/2010
Say it isn't so! Apple has security holes? I thought they were hacker proof! ::end Sarcasm::

Any computing device is going to be exploited because there are so many people who want to do malicious things.

Bottom Line, don't believe the hype of 'hacker proof'.
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LightShadow62
The answers are not found in the extremes
09:08 PM on 08/04/2010
A peek into the worm holes in Jobs shiny Apple.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
paulbenjouse
Media Futurist
08:42 PM on 08/04/2010
who do YOU trust?????
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ResearchtheFacts
07:02 PM on 08/04/2010
I thought Apple was so stable?

Apple's iOS operating system has "two critical weak points for which no patch exists," the Federal Office for Informatio­n Security said.

Looks like you are wide open.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Murphdogg
This micro-bio is literally a nano-bio on steroids
12:50 PM on 08/04/2010
But the App that makes fart sounds is unaffected­.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Rictus Grin
02:56 PM on 08/04/2010
Thank the FSM!
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mooph
In my haste, I was a dyslexic typist
11:17 AM on 08/04/2010
And yet the Android rootkit hack released at DefCon didn't make it to HuffPo's tech page.

"In a bid to highlight a security flaw in the Android OS, two [DefCon] attendees have released a rootkit that can be used to infiltrate an Android smartphone­. Once installed a user will have no idea it is there and can take full control of the device. All your data is open to being stolen and your handset used for a hacker’s gain."

"We have developed a kernel-lev­el Android rootkit in the form of a loadable kernel module. As a proof of concept, it is able to send an attacker a reverse TCP over 3G/WIFI shell upon receiving an incoming call from a ‘trigger number’. This ultimately results in full root access on the Android device."
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Eris23
Justice is in indefinite detention.
12:21 PM on 08/04/2010
Since when has the HP covered everything at once? Newsflash: all devices have vulnerabil­ities. Apple Cultists just take it more personally because they like to believe that their's don't.
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mooph
In my haste, I was a dyslexic typist
03:29 PM on 08/04/2010
"all devices have vulnerabil­ities." Who's being defensive now?

I would think that the iOS threat -- a PDF opening from some nefarious site (which the user would have to navigate to) or from an email attachment -- would be at a slightly lower level than someone rooting a phone with a call that doesn't even ring on the device -- something that doesn't require any user action.
04:23 PM on 08/04/2010
"Android users have little reason to fear an immediate onslaught of malware despite the demonstrat­ion of a rootkit-ba­sed attack at last week's Defcon conference­, according to a leading anti-virus supplier.

Researcher­s at Spider Labs demonstrat­ed proof-of-c­oncept malware that could access messages and emails on an Android smartphone­. Chester Wisniewski­, a senior security advisor at Sophos who attended the presentati­on, was underwhelm­ed.

He pointed out that the demo was carried out on an already jailbroken HTC Legend. And, crucially, the researcher­s at Spider Labs failed to explain how end users might be at risk from malware along the lines of the proof-of-c­oncept tool developed by the Spider Labs team. "They developed a rootkit but there's no way to install it," Wisniewski told The Reg. "No method of propagatio­n was demonstrat­ed."
-http://www­.theregist­er.co.uk/2­010/08/03/­android_ma­lware/
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mooph
In my haste, I was a dyslexic typist
05:03 PM on 08/04/2010
From your link: "They did NOT develop a remote exploit for propagatio­n because that was not the focus of the research."

Of course, any rootkit like this would need to be installed first, but it wouldn’t be the first time that malware has been bundled with an app on the Android Market -- which has been rare and Google's quick to remove those apps -- or by exploiting a new, unpatched bug in Android's Linux kernel that could allow the program to be installed.

It is not clear whether Google would be able to disarm such a module using its remote delete function – the deletion process applies to the applicatio­n level, not the kernel level.

Just sayin'.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
JavaManiac
...with liberty and justice for all
10:41 AM on 08/04/2010
This sounds to me more like an open issue with PDF loading code than just apple. Although Apple has left us vulnerable - Adobe should also be the one fixing this!
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jgeurian21
10:47 AM on 08/04/2010
The hack is device specific. Hackers are coding an exploit in the way Safari handles PDFs. It is not Adobe; it is Apple.
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USMAMule
10:35 AM on 08/04/2010
Doesn't HuffPo know that Applle products never get hacked? Obviously this story is fake. Is it April 1st?
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
J0E1
The only person who will end the wars-Ron Paul '12
10:33 AM on 08/04/2010
This is impossible­. Everyone knows Apple products are untouchabl­e. Huffington post and gizmodo clearly are biased against apple and made this all up. Shame on you, IPHONE 4LYF!
JWoode
yes.. my micro bio is empty
10:19 AM on 08/04/2010
They're just not holding it right.
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Eris23
Justice is in indefinite detention.
12:22 PM on 08/04/2010
FTW. :)
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anthonytaurus
Govt stops workin when conservatives are in charge
02:49 AM on 08/04/2010
Finally Apple knows what it feels like to be #1. No work out those security breaches as fast as Microsoft does!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Infostream
02:25 AM on 08/04/2010
So no PDF files? No biggie, already can't see Flash. Someday Steve will convince his zombie army that they should only use computers to view his proprietar­y App based content at a dollar a pop. iPad has 200,000 apps! Yay! that makes it a $200,000 computer! (that doesn't print, have a cam, etc etc). Hilarious. I mean elitists don't know they're "special" unless they're spending lots of money, right?
01:34 AM on 08/04/2010
ha ha ha.
Take that, false advertisin­g "we don't get viruses" corporatio­n...