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Posts Tagged ‘iphone’

Apple closes PDF flaw in iOS updates for iPhone, iPad

August 13th, 2010 js No comments

By Ed Oswald, Betanews

Apple released iOS 4.0.2 for the iPhone and iPod touch, and iOS 3.2.2 for the iPad on Wednesday, effectively closing the PDF flaw which allowed hackers access to the internal code of those devices. The exploit was central to the jailbreakme.com hack released earlier this month. According to release notes with the updates, the PDF fix is the only change made to the code of the OS.

The jailbreak also made it possible for the iPhone Dev Team to release a version of its ultrasn0w carrier unlock for the iPhone 4 for the first time, which it did two days after the release of jailbreakme.com.

The Cupertino company said shortly after the jailbreak that it was aware of the issue and would be releasing a fix. It is not clear what the Dev Team’s next move would be, considering anyone who updates would now be unable to use the site.

“Comex,” the developer behind jailbreakme.com, only said as part of a tweet late Tuesday that “[I] guess I need to get working on the next jailbreak,” likely in reference to the anticipation that Apple was about to update iOS, which it did indeed do.

Users wishing to update to the new software would be able to do so by connecting their iOS device to iTunes, and clicking “Check for Update.” Similarly, those who may be in line for an automated weekly check for updates may start being prompted to upgrade beginning today.

It appears that those who have jailbroken before the fix would still remain jailbroken, although that has not yet been independently confirmed.

Copyright Betanews, Inc. 2010

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iPhone Jailbreak Uses a PDF Display Vulnerability

August 5th, 2010 js No comments

adeelarshad82 writes “Latest reports indicate that the website that ‘jailbreaks’ iPhones, iPads, and iPod Touches does so by means of a PDF-based vulnerability in OS X. PDF parsing and rendering is a core feature of OS X, and there have been several other vulnerabilities in the past in iOS CoreGraphics PDF components.” As Gruber points out, the proper term for this is not “jailbreak,” but “remote code exploit in the wild.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


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iPhone’s PIN-Based Security Transparent To Ubuntu

May 31st, 2010 js No comments

ndogg writes “Security experts found that the iPhone 3GS has very little security, even with a PIN set up. They plugged one into Ubuntu 10.04, and it was automounted with almost all of the iPhone’s data exposed. This has been reported to Apple, but the company seems to be having difficulty reproducing the problem.”

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Categories: Security Tags: , ,

Android Ported To iPhone

April 27th, 2010 js No comments

anethema writes “iPhone hacker planetbeing, from the iPhone Dev Team, has successfully ported the Android OS over to the iPhone. He is doing it on a first-generation iPhone, but others may be possible. The port is pretty functional, with data, voice, and many apps working, although it is running a bit sluggish and buggy at the moment. There appears to be much work left.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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New iPhone Attack Kills Apps, Reroutes Web Traffic

February 11th, 2010 js No comments

Trailrunner7 sends in a threatpost.com article on exploiting flaws in the way the iPhone handles digital certificates. “[Several flaws] could lead to an attacker being able to create his own trusted certificate and entice users into downloading malicious files onto their iPhones. The result of the attack is that a remote hacker is able to change some settings on the iPhone and force all of the user’s Web traffic to run through any server he chooses, and also to change the root certificate on the phone, enabling him to man-in-the-middle SSL traffic from that phone. … Charlie Miller, an Apple security researcher at Independent Security Evaluators, said that the attack works, although it would not lead to remote code execution on the iPhone. ‘It definitely works. I downloaded the file and ran it and it worked,’ Miller said. ‘The only thing is that it warns you that the file will change your phone, but it also says that the certificate is from Apple and it’s been verified.’”

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Categories: Security Tags: , ,

First Malicious iPhone Worm In the Wild

November 25th, 2009 js No comments

An anonymous reader writes “After the ikee worm that displayed a picture of Rick Astley on jailbroken iPhones, the first malicious iPhone worm (Google translation; original, in Dutch) has now been discovered in the wild. Internet provider XS4ALL in the Netherlands encountered several of such devices (link in Dutch) on the wireless networks of their customers and put out a warning. After obtaining a copy of the malware it was discovered that the jailbroken phones, which are exploited through openSSH with a default password, scan IP ranges of mobile internet providers for other vulnerable iPhones, phone home to a C&C botnet server, are able to update themselves with additional malware and have the ability to dump the SMS database as well. Owners of a jailbroken iPhone with a default root password are advised to flash to the latest Apple firmware in order to ensure no malware is present.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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iPhone cannot win the smartphone wars

October 28th, 2009 js No comments

By Joe Wilcox, Betanews

I’m going to make a bold prediction: Apple’s iPhone will lose the mobile device wars. Such statement will send some iPhone fans howling — perhaps appropriately so with the full moon days passed and Halloween days away. :)

Put another way: iPhone is to Android — and somewhat Symbian OS — handsets as Macintosh was to the DOS/Windows PC in the 1980s and 1990s. The Mac’s rocky start in 1984-85 gave way to great success because of several killer applications, with desktop publishing being among the most important. But by the mid 1990s, Windows PCs pushed down Mac market share. The iPhone is poised to track similarly. Gartner predicts that Android OS shipments will exceed iPhone OS by 2012 (see chart). I’m a believer.

The question of how far iPhone can go is important, because a new computing platform is rapidly emerging. Mobile devices like cell phones are sure to replace PCs. PEW Internet claims by 2020. I’m on record as predicting much sooner.

Today, Gartner predicted that this year, worldwide smartphone shipments would grow by 29 percent year over year to 180 million units, exceeding laptop unit shipments. From this year, Gartner predicts that end users will spend more on smartphones than they will on notebooks. The analyst firm expects that most PC manufacturers will move into the smartphone market (where Apple already is with iPhone).

Chicken-and-Egg Thinking

The iPhone’s staunchest defenders insist that applications will rule the market. Over the weekend, tech blogger Robert Scoble followed a Twitter debate with blog post: “85,000 reasons why iPhone isn’t going to be disrupted.” Like many other iPhone enthusiast bloggers or journalists, Scoble believes that iPhone must succeed because of the vast number of applications. In a somewhat terse Twitter exchange, I called him and other die-hard iPhone fans unreasonable. He blogged in response:

If you get me all those, and all the other 85,000 apps, but on a device that is sexier and more fun to use (and more productive) then I’ll definitely be reasonable and switch…Until then I have 85,000 reasons to be unreasonable…Yes, I’m unreasonable. Let me know when I can stop being unreasonable! :)

The large number of applications does at first glance seem like a pretty good reason to claim iPhone’s eventual domination of what arguably is the next, major computing platform. However, the number of applications is no surefire measure of iPhone’s or any other platform’s success. Applications are but one — and not the most important — platform characteristic. Successful platforms share five common traits:

  • There are good development tools and APIs for easily making good applications
  • There is at least one killer application people really want
  • There is breadth of useful applications
  • Third parties make lots of money
  • There is a robust ecosystem

I usually only put the first four items on the list, but here extend the fifth from the fourth, which is the most important of all. To single out applications as the measure of success is to put the chicken before the egg. Related: The platform chicken-or-egg scenario, where there is question: Which comes first, the platform or the applications? The chicken-or-egg question presumes that many PC operating systems fail because there aren’t enough applications; that many developers wait to develop applications because they want to see if the platform will gain momentum among consumer or business customers; that platforms cannot gain momentum if there are not applications.

Gartner Smartphones 2012

But this reasoning is flawed. It ignores fundamental rules of economics. The chicken-or-egg theorists should ask why do developers wait at all — or not? My answer: Because they want to make money. The fourth point in my list — “third parties make lots of money” — is more important than number of applications. It’s the most fundamental reason why platforms succeed or fail. The fifth point –”there is a robust ecosystem” — is intrinsically connected to the fourth and over the long term is as important, if not more.

The Ecosystem is Everything

Among technology platforms, the Windows PC is classic example of a robust and vital ecosystem. The Google informational/search platform is another. Around either platform, there is a discernible ecosystem of third parties — not just software developers — making lots of money. The two ecosystems are broad and deep. By comparison, Apple’s App Store/iPhone/iPod touch platform is narrower and shallower, despite the depth of applications, because the ecosystem depends on a closed, end-to-end technology platform. Apple controls everything.

By comparison, in the 1980s and 1990s, DOS/Windows was more open than Mac OS, because Microsoft only controlled the software and Chairman Bill Gates took the brilliant approach of licensing to third parties. (Commenters, please don’t huff. I didn’t write that DOS/Windows was open, but more open than Mac OS, because of licensing.) Through the licensing scheme, good luck (because of competitors’ mistakes) and Microsoft efforts to establish standards around DOS/Windows and DOS/Windows PCs, a robust ecosystem of third-party profiteers emerged.

The ecosystem is everything. Windows Vista’s market failure is good explanation why. Vista suffered from perception problems that were much larger than its performance problems; Vista isn’t a bad operating system, it just wasn’t good enough to displace Windows XP. Vista wasn’t just competing against XP but a huge, supporting ecosystem of third parties making money from it — PC, peripheral and component manufacturers; distributors, resellers and retailers; software and Web services developers; and consumer, enterprise and small business services providers, among many others. XP had five years in the market before Vista’s release to build up this broad and deep ecosystem, which also included customers — many of them large businesses — dependent on the software to make (or save) money.

What’s really interesting about the Gartner numbers (see chart): Windows Mobile declines, but not that dramatically, through 2012. Why? The ecosystem. Microsoft has established a viable Windows Mobile ecosystem that somewhat compensates for the weak mobile strategy. Ecosystem also is one major reason why Symbian OS will remain so dominant, despite steep market share declines. Another: Nokia plans to open source Symbian OS (process is underway). By comparison, Gartner predicts that BlackBerry and iPhone OSes will reach near identical market shares, and, not coincidentally, both are part of closed, end-to-end systems.

A History Lesson

Parallels between the past and present foreshadow iPhone’s future. The IBM PC launched in mid-1981. About 18 months later, Compaq announced its 12.5 kg clone, nicknamed the “luggable.” A year after Compaq started selling its IBM PC clone, Apple announced the Macintosh, in January 1984.

Desktop publishing was the Mac’s first killer application, contributing to sales growth over the next five years. But Apple couldn’t win the “Clone Wars” against DOS — and later Windows — PCs. The resulting clone attack, essentially every other PC manufacturer against Apple, was too much for Macintosh. The PC ecosystem overwhelmed Apple.

To reiterate: In the 2000s, like the 1980s, Apple successfully launched industry-changing platforms — iPhone and Macintosh, respectively. Like Macintosh, iPhone’s end-to-end licensing model is poised to limit the supporting ecosystem’s growth. Meanwhile, Google, Microsoft and Nokia license their mobile operating systems to third parties.

Among the three, Google’s Android is the one to most closely watch, followed by Symbian OS, assuming publication of source code under open source license is completed next year as planned. While DOS/Windows was more open than Mac OS during the 1990s, Windows Mobile is more closed because Microsoft has failed to establish standards around the software. By comparison, Android, which Google open-sourced, is to mobile devices more like DOS/Windows was to PCs in the 1980s and 1990s: A more open operating system around which third parties make money and an ecosystem thrives.

iPhone Against the World

In March 2009 Microsoft Watch blog post, “The iPhone Platform Comes of Age,” I glowingly praised App Store/iPhone/iPod touch. But I tempered my enthusiasm:

Whether or not that platform succeeds depends on many factors. Among them:

  • How Google, Microsoft and Nokia shape up their mobile platforms in 2009-10.
  • How many market share-leading handset manufacturers adopt Android (HTC just announced three more Android handsets).
  • How quickly Apple can expand its iPhone OS install base — and that includes iPod touch.

Since I raised these reservations about Apple’s platform, Microsoft and Nokia fumbled their mobile strategies. Meanwhile, Android is rapidly gaining momentum among handset manufacturers and developers. In a presentation given last week, Gartner analyst Ken Dulaney predicted that Android smartphone OS share would grow from 1.6 percent in first quarter 2009 to 18 percent in fourth quarter 2012 (see chart). By comparison, iPhone OS: 13.6 percent, up from 10.8 percent. Symbian OS will remain dominant, Gartner predicts.

That said, the mobile device market will be bigger than just handsets, which is where Android already is gaining adoption for use on other connected devices. Barnes & Noble’s Nook ebook reader and Verizon’s Droid phone are but recent examples of where Android is going, and where iPhone is not. Meanwhile, new information published this week shows how Android 2.0 emphasizes information interoperability — openness that should grow the ecosystem, like DOS/Windows did for PCs decades ago.

Another “everyone else against Apple battle” is coming, with Android looking to be the better OS around which an ecosystem grows and thrives. There’s a Star Wars metaphor here somewhere. Apple lost out to DOS/Windows because of the attack of the PC clones. Now the droids are coming for iPhone. Apple’s power is the Force — blogger and journalist enthusiasts like Robert Scoble. Can the Force win? I say no, but you tell me. That’s what comments are for.

Copyright Betanews, Inc. 2009

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Categories: Mobile Phones Tags: ,

Verizon touts Android’s superiority over iPhone

October 20th, 2009 js No comments

By Tim Conneally, Betanews

Every major iteration of Android is named after a pastry (Cupcake, Donut, etc.), and whenever the latest version is being worked on, a giant foam rendition of that pastry is planted on the lawn of Google’s headquarters. Last week, a giant eclair, signifying the impending drop of Android 2.0, was unveiled.

This is normally a pretty big event in and of itself, but it happened on the same day that Google had its quarterly earnings call, and CEO Eric Schmidt made the bold statement that “Android adoption is about to explode,” without providing too much more detail.

But not a lot of detail was needed to see what was going on. A little more than a week prior, Google and Verizon made a joint announcement that Verizon would be getting its first Android phone, and Schmidt’s enthusiasm for the mobile operator was abundantly clear at the time (“Verizon’s data network is the best in the US by far.”) Additionally, Motorola’s Android device destined for Verizon had not made its debut yet, so it looked like only a matter of time before something big happened.

Over the weekend, the push began with a captivating television advertisement.

Moving beyond the tame MyTouch3G advertising campaign which has an untoward number of former Saturday Night Live cast members (none of whom seem to appreciate the device), the new ads take an aggressive stance against Apple’s iPhone.

The first ad shows no product yet. It simply lists a number of things which the iPhone cannot do (“iDon’t allow open development, iDon’t run simultaneous apps,” etc.) and closes with “Droid Does…November.”

“Droid,” though a trademark of George Lucas, is expected to be the official name of the phone which has until now been called Motorola Sholes, an Android 2.0-equipped QWERTY slider running the powerful TI OMAP3430 processor.

While the ad harkens back to the 16-bit era of video gaming when Sega ran a campaign with a nearly identical tag line (“Genesis Does what Nintendon’t,”) it is one of the most direct advertising attacks a Fortune 500 company has made on Apple, which has itself been directly attacking Microsoft Windows in its advertisements for many years.

Any photographs and specs related to the Droid are still totally unofficial. Today, Boy Genius Report, which has been leaking information about the Motorola Sholes for months, posted an early hands-on report which lauds the device as “the thinnest QWERTY slider we’ve ever seen….the fastest Android device we’ve ever used….the best screen we’ve ever seen on an Android Handset…the most impressive phone we’ve used since the iPhone.”

That’s a lot of superlatives. Pair them with Schmidt’s glowing praise for Verizon and things get downright mushy.

Copyright Betanews, Inc. 2009

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Verizon’s Challenge To the iPhone Confirmed

October 20th, 2009 js No comments

misnohmer writes “Verizon has just launched a new set of ads confirming the rumors of its upcoming iPhone competitor: ‘Unlike previous Android phones, the Droid is rumored to be powered by the TI OMAP3430, the same core that the iPhone and Palm Pre use, and which significantly outperforms Qualcomm 528MHz ARM11-based Android phones that exist today. Droid will also be running v.2.0 of Android, with a significantly upgraded user interface. The Droid poses a different and more significant challenge to the iPhone than any other phone to date. The Palm Pre could have been that challenger, but it lacked the Verizon network, and users were unimpressed with the hardware. According to people who’ve handled the device, the Droid is the most sophisticated mobile device to hit the market to date from a hardware standpoint. When you combine that with the Verizon network, you’ve got something that is most definitely a challenger to the Jesus phone.’”

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Finally, a keyboard for the iPhone

October 15th, 2009 js No comments

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We can’t say we’ve had problems typing on our iPhones here at HackaDay, must be the elfin fingers, but for [Ben Kurtz] it was a real pain. The obvious solution is to carry around an Arduino, 9 volt battery, iPhone breakout board, a ps2 keyboard, and of course the iPhone itself. Well, maybe it could be a little smaller with fewer parts, but at least it works. The Arduino reads input from the keyboard and converts it to serial, then the iPhone pulls the data via VNC. Like we said, a little roundabout, but we love the amount of ingenuity involved.

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Categories: Hardware Tags: ,