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First iPhone Flaw Found Print E-mail
Written by Adam Gosling   
Tuesday, 24 July 2007
Security consultants from Baltimore claim to be the first to discover a security flaw in the Apple iPhone that would allow an attacker to gain total control over the hugely popular device - obtaining information, making calls or listening in.

According to a report in the New York Times a team the computer security consultants say the flaw in the Apple iPhone allows them to take control of the device. The researchers demonstrated the exploit implementing it when an attack code was automatically injected into the device when it visited a specially prepared Website, but the report suggests that the same flaw would allow an attacker to take control of the iPhone via the device's Wi-Fi connection.

The researchers, Independent Security Evaluators (or I.S.E.), claim the vulnerability is a buffer overflow flaw in the device's Web browser. The iPhone browser is based on Apple's PC browser Safari which the researchers say has the same flaw. The researcher had planned to expose that Buffer Overrun flaw next month at a Black Hat conference.

Once cracked, the phone could be made to follow instructions in the attack code such as transmitting files such as contacts and e-mail addresses. Dr. Charles A. Miller, the principal security analyst for the firm Told the NYT: "Once you did manage to find a hole, you were in complete control." 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, said the report.

Apple said they are looking into the claims made by the security firm, but did not confirm whether it would implement the software patch it proposed as a solution to the problem.

While there are no known attackers exploiting the flaw this could change as the researchers plan to detail the vulnerability on a Website called www.exploitingiphone.com.
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