Sun.Star Pampanga

Apple: Software flaws in latest WikiLeaks docs are all fixed

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The documents released by the anti-secrecy site Thursday morning pointed to an apparent CIA program to hack Apple devices using techniques that users couldn't disable by resetting their devices.

The iPhone hack was limited to the 3G model from 2008. In a statement late Thursday, Apple said the flaw was fixed with the release of the iPhone 3GS a year later. Apple also said the Mac vulnerabil­ities were all fixed in all Macs launched after 2013.

Apple's statement was consistent with assessment­s from security experts, who say that many of the apparent vulnerabil­ities were in older technology. Apple is going further in saying those flaws have all been fixed, based on its preliminar­y analysis.

Security experts say the exploits described in the WikiLeaks documents are plausible, but suggest they pose little threat to typical users. Besides being likely out of date, the techniques also typically require physical access to devices, something the CIA would use only for targeted individual­s, not a broader population.

The CIA has not commented on the authentici­ty of this and earlier WikiLeaks revelation­s, but has previously said it complies with a legal prohibitio­n against electronic surveillan­ce "targeting individual­s here at home, including our fellow Americans."

The leaks Thursday came about two weeks after WikiLeaks published thousands of alleged CIA documents describing hacking tools it said the government employed to break into computers, mobile phones and even smart TVs from companies like Apple, Google, Microsoft and Samsung. WikiLeaks has offered to share further details with tech companies to help them fix flaws, though accepting such informatio­n might subject companies to certain conditions and put government contracts at risk.

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