The Sunday Guardian

Security flaw may let hackers beat iPhone encryption

- REUTERS REUTERS JOSEPH MENN SAN FRANCISCO REUTERS

A major flaw in Apple’s software for mobile devices could allow hackers to intercept email and other communicat­ions that are meant to be encrypted, the company said in a Friday afternoon announceme­nt. If attackers have access to a user’s network, such as by sharing the same unsecured wireless service offered by a restaurant, they could see or alter exchanges between the user and protected sites such as Gmail and Facebook, experts said. “It’s as bad as you could imagine, that’s all I can say,” said Johns Hopkins University cryptograp­hy professor Matthew Green. Apple did not say when or how it learned about the flaw in the way iOS handles sessions in what are known as secure sockets layer or transport layer security, nor did it say whether the flaw was being exploited. But a statement on its support website was blunt: The software “failed to validate the authentici­ty of the connection.” Apple released software patches and an update for the current version of iOS for iPhone 4 and later, 5th-generation iPod touches, and iPad 2 and later. Without the fix, a hacker could impersonat­e a protected site and sit in the middle as email or financial data goes between the user and the real site, Green said. Apple did not reply to requests for comment. The flaw appears to be in the way that well-understood protocols were implemente­d, an embarrassi­ng lapse for a company of Apple’s stature and technical prowess. The company was recently stung by leaked intelligen­ce documents claiming that authoritie­s had 100% success rate in breaking into iPhones. Friday’s announceme­nt suggests that enterprisi­ng hackers could have had great success as well if they knew of the flaw.

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