A text message could hack your iPhone. This sounds like a plot from the sci-fi genre or a Robin Cook novel but it's not. The research team at Google's Project Zero discovered 6 alarming bugs in Apple's messaging system that could be exploited in order to gain control over the users' iPhones and cause potential damage.
"These can be turned into the sort of bugs that will execute code and be able to eventually be used for weaponized things like accessing your data, so the worst-case scenario is that these bugs are used to harm users" according to Project Zero researcher Natalie Soltanovich.
Hackers are able to access your iPhone How secure is iMessage?
Four out of six malicious bugs can allow hackers to gain access to your phone through sending the coded iMessage. Apple has repaired 5 of the vulnerabilities however one remains and is one of the four that could pose a grave security threat to your information and security.
If you click on the message, the hacker gains the access to your mobile as well as the data. They have access to all your phone's data including your photos, messages, pictures and bank account details as well as credit card details transactions and more. They can also destroy or erase your phone.
Project Zero has published details on the five issues that were resolved. The sixth one was hidden to keep it from hackers from exploiting it.
To ensure your safety from the 5 vulnerabilities that Apple has been fixed, make sure you update your phone to the most recent versions of iOS. Apple has always said that in order to guard yourself against dangers and to ensure their security Apple products, you must always ensure that your software is up-to-date.
Is data security a fable?
Security is a crucial aspect of Apple's advertising campaign particularly following Facebook or Google's information leak and privacy violations in recent times, including Tim Cook declaring that privacy is a fundamental human right'.
Apple has lived up to its promise in the majority of cases however they have encountered similar situations, as with the FaceTime Eavesdropping scandal in which an Arizona teenager discovered a flaw which allowed someone to hear conversations going on at the other end before the call was answered.
Soltanovich together and Project Zero participant Samuel Grog, have been studying interaction-free bugs that give access to devices simply by calling or messaging them without the requirement for the receiver to answer the phone.
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