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IPhone Security Issues: Apple Vows To Patch 'Critical' Software Flaw

Iphone Security Issues

JORDAN ROBERTSON   07/ 7/11 07:57 PM ET   AP

SAN FRANCISCO — A new security hole has opened up in Apple Inc.'s iPhone, iPad and iPod Touch devices, raising alarms about the susceptibility of some of the world's hottest tech gadgets to hacker attacks.

Flaws in the software running those devices came to light after a German security agency warned that criminals could use them to steal confidential data off the devices. Apple, the world's largest technology company by market value, said Thursday that it is working on a fix that will be distributed in an upcoming software upgrade.

With the security hole, an attacker can get malicious software onto a device by tricking its owner into clicking an infected PDF file. Germany's Federal Office for Information Security called the flaws "critical weaknesses" in Apple's iOS operating system.

Internet-connected mobile devices are still subject to fewer attacks than personal computer, but they could eventually prove a juicy target for hackers because they are warehouses of confidential banking, e-mail, calendar, contact and other data.

Software vulnerabilities are discovered all the time. What makes the latest discovery alarming is that the weaknesses are already being actively exploited – albeit in a consensual way.

The latest concerns were prompted by the emergence of a new version of a program to allow Apple devices to run any software and circumvent the restrictions that Apple notoriously retains over software distributed through its online store. There are security risks of doing so, but many people find it liberating to install their own software.

Although this program is something people would seek out, the weaknesses that its authors discovered could easily be used for malice, security experts say.

There is an irony in the controversy: The site distributing the program offers a fix for the problem, but to get the fix, a user has to first install the program in question. So a user must defy Apple's restrictions to get the protection until Apple comes up with a fix of its own.

Charlie Miller, a prominent hacker of Apple products, said it likely took months to develop the program to break Apple's restrictions, but a criminal might need only a day or two to modify it for nefarious purposes.

Apple Inc. spokeswoman Bethan Lloyd said Thursday the company is "aware of this reported issue and developing a fix." She would not say when the update will be available.

One reason for gadget owners to take heart: Attacks on smartphones and other Internet gadgets are still relatively rare. One reason is PC-based attacks are still highly lucrative. Still, vulnerabilities such as the ones Apple is confronting show that consumers should take care of securing their mobile devices as they would their home computer.

"These things are computers – they're just small, portable computers that happen to have a phone tacked onto them," said Marc Fossi, manager of research and development for Symantec Security Response. "You've got to treat them more like a computer than a phone. You have to be aware of what's going on with these devices."

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SAN FRANCISCO — A new security hole has opened up in Apple Inc.'s iPhone, iPad and iPod Touch devices, raising alarms about the susceptibility of some of the world's hottest tech gadgets to hack...
SAN FRANCISCO — A new security hole has opened up in Apple Inc.'s iPhone, iPad and iPod Touch devices, raising alarms about the susceptibility of some of the world's hottest tech gadgets to hack...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tanker10a
10:41 AM on 07/11/2011
Cracking a screen to that level is definitely a "product flaw"....
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
omg wtf lol bbq
05:02 AM on 07/10/2011
So what you're telling me is that if I don't jailbreak or already haven't jailbroken my iPhone then I should be okay... Jordan, you should really not try to sensationalize.
11:22 PM on 07/14/2011
No. That's not what it's saying at all. It's saying that there's a massive, exploitable flaw and people are using it to jailbreak. It'll still work on a non-jailbroken phone - that's the entire basis of how the jailbreaking works.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
07:54 PM on 07/09/2011
I have a couple of problems with this article. One, jailbreaking is legal, whether Apple (or the industry at large) likes it or not. Two, it doesn't take an exploit for a "hacker" or "criminal" to get at your user data, either on iOS or Android. The App Store concept itself is a massive vulnerability--all those users and their payment info, collected into a single, massive database? It's hard to imagine a more tempting target. There are many rogue apps on Android, with its looser approval process, but just last summer, an Apple-approved developer named Thuat Nguyen was discovered using Apple-approved apps to steal users' data, which he then used to force users into buying thousands of dollars worth of his own apps, increasing his rankings and luring in more victims. Apple has been very tight-lipped about that problem, too--and they made people go through their banks to get refunds. We were all safer when computer software was sold on an open market, not in a magical walled garden with a 30% commission off the top.
01:06 PM on 07/09/2011
Crapple is amusing, eh?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
omg wtf lol bbq
05:00 AM on 07/10/2011
About as amusing as Phandroid and Crackberry.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
InspiredByTruth
06:04 PM on 07/10/2011
Nope. Just said..or rather its apologist fanboys are.
12:37 PM on 07/09/2011
I lost count after the third one.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MISTERWRITER
Author- Screenwriter - Publisher - Reporter
12:18 PM on 07/09/2011
What data am I keeping on my iPad that I am worried about? I never retain passwords, especially banking and anything that could be sensitive is never left on a device that could be stolen at any time.

As for privacy - between GPS and 3G providing location and customized ads designed just for me - privacy does not exist.

That said, I am just glad it is not a PC
SECT Dem
former Dem. Can't be wrong forever
10:58 AM on 07/09/2011
With only H1-B's writing the software (and they can't write anything unless they can find the code on Google) what would you expect.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JFetch
You guys take these Micro-bios too seriously.
05:59 AM on 07/09/2011
Has anyone actually had their iPhone hacked in this manner or is this more scare tactics to keep people scared of more open products?
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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08:57 AM on 07/09/2011
Everyone who has had their phone jailbroken recently has used done so through this pdf exploit, but it could also be used maliciously.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CaptainObvvious
Calling me a liberal is a compliment!
01:33 PM on 07/11/2011
The iPhone hasn't been jailbroken by this PDF exploit in a LONG LONG time.
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Whinger
I'm Just Me!
05:04 AM on 07/09/2011
Little green Apple!
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JumpySnark
My micro-bio is still pending approval...
09:23 AM on 07/09/2011
God didn't make?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
librldem
Snarking for Merika n jebus! Glory!
10:52 AM on 07/09/2011
I think I heard gawd got a droid... or maybe it was jebus... I keep getting the two of them mixed up.
02:47 AM on 07/09/2011
No one is safe
02:18 AM on 07/09/2011
Thanks apple for making my iPad 2 to be jailbroken easier and fast.
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fla kracker
Fame is a weed, reputation an oak tree
07:38 AM on 07/09/2011
You have any probs with Ibooks after the JB
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
opprobrious
More speech. Less Flagging.
02:14 AM on 07/09/2011
And here I thought the flaw was the smartphone's almost immediate obsolescence.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
J242
Micro-bio? We don't need no stinkin' micro-bio!
01:29 AM on 07/09/2011
So, Adobe's acrobat is the hole in the security and people are still bashing Apple for not letting have free reign over their OS to run Flash content? Wow...
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JFetch
You guys take these Micro-bios too seriously.
06:01 AM on 07/09/2011
Nobody has been hacked. It's a scare tactic to keep people like you at the Apple teet.
11:37 AM on 07/09/2011
Man it has to be great to be free of the ability to engage in critical thought.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
msstrick40
OBAMA 2012..and you know this.
12:26 AM on 07/09/2011
Judging by the picture....I thought they were gonna say...because they can break...smh
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
barkingcat
Woof?
09:18 AM on 07/09/2011
Same here.
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44jupiter
Okay, where's the damn ice?
11:53 PM on 07/08/2011
Apple has made a critical error. Many Bothans died to bring us this information.
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JumpySnark
My micro-bio is still pending approval...
09:25 AM on 07/09/2011
Help me ObiJobs Kenobi, you're our only chance!
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cmr11
how do you want it
11:27 AM on 07/09/2011
many people at foxcomm have died to bring us these products but nobody cares about that............