iOS 13 The Anti Hacking Operating System
Apple hit back Friday at a Google research report suggesting iPhones may have been targeted by a long-running hacking operation, calling it inaccurate and misleading as they prepare to launch iOS 13.
Apple spokesman Fred Sainz said in a statement the research released by Google created a âfalse impressionâ that large numbers of iPhone users may have been compromised.
Sainz said that contrary to what Google claimed, the incident was a ânarrowly focusedâ attack which affected âfewer than a dozen websites that focus on content related to the Uighur community, an ethnic minority in China.
âRegardless of the scale of the attack, we take the safety and security of all users extremely seriously,â he wrote.
âGoogleâs post, issued six months after iOS patches were released, creates the false impression of âmass exploitationâ to âmonitor the private activities of entire populations in real-time,â stoking fear among all iPhone users that their devices had been compromised. This was never the case.â
Researchers with Googleâs Project Zero security task force said last week that an âindiscriminateâ hacking operation that targeted iPhones used websites to implant malicious software to access photos, user locations, and other data.
âSimply visiting the hacked site was enough for the exploit server to attack your device, and if it was successful, install a monitoring implant,â said Project Zeroâs Ian Beer.
Sainz said Apple believes that the website attacks were operational for roughly two months, not two years as Google implied.
âWe fixed the vulnerabilities in question in February â iOS 13 working extremely quickly to resolve the issue just 10 days after we learned about it,â Sainz said.
âWhen Google approached us, we were already in the process of fixing the exploited bugs.
Security is a never-ending journey and our customers can be confident we are working for them .â- iphone iOS 13 to be released next week.
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© Agence France-Presse