Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Apple reveals new security feature

‘Lockdown Mode’ able to block government spyware

- JOSEPH MENN

Apple said Wednesday that it will introduce an innovative security feature to give potential targets of government hacking an easy way to make their iPhones safer.

The company said it would be releasing the new “Lockdown Mode” in test versions of its operating systems shortly, with full distributi­on in the fall as part of iOS 16 for iPhones as well as the operating systems for iPads and Mac computers.

The action follows waves of attacks documented by The Washington Post and others showing that iPhones were being hacked by Pegasus spyware distribute­d by the Israeli company NSO Group and then used to capture contact informatio­n and live audio. But while Pegasus prompted Apple to act, it is not the only spyware that would be hobbled by the new feature.

Once engaged, Lockdown Mode will block most types of attachment­s on messages and prevent the phone from previewing web links, which are frequently used to transmit spyware. Locking a phone will disable wired connection­s to computers and accessorie­s that are used to take control of devices that have been seized by police or stolen by spies.

Apple’s lockdown tactic resolves a long-standing tension in its design approach between security concerns and the pursuit of easy-touse, highly functional capabiliti­es. The extra usability made the phones more vulnerable to attack through iMessage, FaceTime and other software. Lockdown Mode gives users the choice of whether to maintain those features. When activated, it limits what the phone can do.

Ivan Krstic, Apple’s head of security engineerin­g, said that “the vast majority of users” will have no need of the

high-security mode but that the company will work with security researcher­s to keep protecting the minority at severe risk. The more secure mode can be easily toggled on and off, but Apple said the highest-value targets would probably leave it on.

After The Post and an internatio­nal consortium news outlets reported last year that Pegasus had been used against political dissidents, human rights advocates and journalist­s, Apple sued NSO and issued its first sweeping notificati­ons to those who may have been hacked by NSO’s government clients. The United States, alarmed by the pervasiven­ess of the spyware, placed NSO on a trade blacklist that prohibits it from doing business with American companies.

Though NSO claims it limits its buyers to government­s and authorizes the spyware’s use only against terrorists and criminals, the spyware was found on a phone belonging to the wife of slain Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi, as well as those of several French cabinet ministers, the estranged wife and daughter of the ruler of Dubai, and a Saudi dissident.

Researcher­s at the University of Toronto’s Citizen Lab captured what they said was a new version of Pegasus last year that exploited Apple devices through iMessage without needing any action from the victim to be installed. That triggered an Apple investigat­ion and the notificati­ons to targets.

On a call with reporters Tuesday, Apple representa­tives said those warnings have now gone to residents of 150 countries, underscori­ng the dramatic scale of the problem.

Citizen Lab founder Ron Deibert said that while he had not tried out the new setup, it is “along the lines of steps we have been advocating that companies can take.”

“Anything that can reduce the attack surface is something we very much appreciate,” he said.

Apple has pledged to donate any damages it wins from its lawsuit against NSO to efforts to expose and blunt the impact of spyware. In Wednesday’s announceme­nt, Apple said an initial $10 million grant it had promised to make has gone to the Dignity and Justice Fund, which is advised by the Ford Foundation.

The fund will get technical guidance from a committee that includes Apple’s Krstic, Citizen Lab’s Deibert and experts from Amnesty Internatio­nal, which cooperated in last year’s Pegasus Project, and the advocacy group Access Now.

The Ford Foundation’s Lori McGlinchey said she hoped to steer the money to help newer anti-spyware efforts in multiple fields and “help bring accountabi­lity to the global cyber arms trade.”As an example, McGlinchey cited efforts to lobby shareholde­rs of software companies against supporting unethical conduct.

 ?? (AP Photo/Noah Berger) ?? The new Apple MacBook Air with the M2 processor is displayed as visitors take photos of it, following the keynote presentati­on of Apple’s World Wide Developer Conference on the campus of Apple’s headquarte­rs in Cupertino, Calif., last month.
(AP Photo/Noah Berger) The new Apple MacBook Air with the M2 processor is displayed as visitors take photos of it, following the keynote presentati­on of Apple’s World Wide Developer Conference on the campus of Apple’s headquarte­rs in Cupertino, Calif., last month.

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