A team of computer security consultants said they have found a flaw in Apple’s popular new iPhone that allows them to take control of the device.
The researchers, working for Independent Security Evaluators, a company that tests its clients’ computer security by hacking it, said they could take control of iPhones through a Wi-Fi connection or by tricking users into going to a website that contains a malicious code.
The hack, the first reported, allowed them to tap the wealth of personal information the phones contain.
Although Apple built considerable security measures into its device, Charles Miller, the principal security analyst for the firm, said, “Once you did manage to find a hole, you were in complete control.”
The firm, based in Baltimore, alerted Apple about the vulnerability and recommended a software patch that could solve the problem.
A spokeswoman for Apple, Lynn Fox, said, “Apple takes security very seriously and has a great track record of addressing potential vulnerabilities before they can affect users.”
“We’re looking into the report submitted by ISE and always welcome feedback on how to improve our security,” she said.
The company said there was no evidence that this flaw had been exploited or that users had been affected, and it knew of no other exploits of this nature.
Miller, a former employee of the National Security Agency who has a doctorate in computer science, demonstrated the hack to a reporter by using his iPhone’s Web browser to visit a website of his own design.
Once he was there, the site injected a bit of code into the iPhone that then took over the phone. The phone promptly followed instructions to transmit a set of files to the attacking computer that included recent text messages — including one that had been sent to the reporter’s cellphone moments before — as well as telephone contacts and e-mail addresses.
“We can get any file we want,” he said. Potentially, he added, the attack could be used to program the phone to make calls, running up large bills or even turning it into a portable bugging device.
Steven Bellovin, a professor of computer science at Columbia University, said, “This looks like a very genuine hack.”
Bellovin, who was for many years a computer security expert at AT&T Labs Research, said the vulnerability of the iPhone was an inevitable result of the long-anticipated convergence of computing and telephony. – New York Times News Service