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Russia Says US Hacked Thousands of iPhones in iOS Zero-Click Attacks (bleepingcomputer.com) 66

Russian cybersecurity firm Kaspersky says some iPhones on its network were hacked using an iOS vulnerability that installed malware via iMessage zero-click exploits. From a report: The delivery of the message exploits a vulnerability that leads to code execution without requiring any user interaction, leading to the download of additional malicious from the attackers' server. Subsequently, the message and attachment are wiped from the device. At the same time, the payload stays behind, running with root privileges to collect system and user information and execute commands sent by the attackers.

Kaspersky says the campaign started in 2019 and reports the attacks are still ongoing. The cybersecurity firm has named the campaign "Operation Triangulation" and is inviting anyone who knows more about it to share information. [...] In a statement coinciding with Kaspersky's report, Russia's FSB intelligence and security agency claims that Apple deliberately provided the NSA with a backdoor it can use to infect iPhones in the country with spyware. The FSB alleges that it has discovered malware infections on thousands of Apple iPhones belonging to officials within the Russian government and staff from the embassies of Israel, China, and several NATO member nations in Russia. Despite the seriousness of the allegations, the FSB has provided no proof of its claims.

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Russia Says US Hacked Thousands of iPhones in iOS Zero-Click Attacks

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  • With the way things have been going, why would Russia encourage government employees to use phones made outside of Russia? The same applies to China, if they are going to be paranoid that someone is watching, then they should have their own devices made. If I worked in government, I wouldn't trust ANY device in the first place, and would make a point of jailbreaking every device, make sure the version of the operating system was fully clean, etc, without any carrier or phone manufacturer software pre-in
    • I'd love to see what a phone made inside Russia with Russian silicon would look like. Probably the size of an actual brick phone and as quick as Windows 95 on a 386.

      • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday June 01, 2023 @01:47PM (#63568111)
        The battery life would be impressive, but the battery half-life would keep most consumers at bay.
      • Please make them suffer through those 9600baud modem connection tones every time they want to conect.

      • I'd love to see what a phone made inside Russia with Russian silicon would look like. Probably the size of an actual brick phone and as quick as Windows 95 on a 386.

        Your comment reminded me about an old SCTV skit from the 1980s that mentioned a "new Soviet minicam" - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oHjaAu1GTZU [youtube.com]

      • I'd love to see what a phone made inside Russia with Russian silicon would look like. Probably the size of an actual brick phone and as quick as Windows 95 on a 386.

        If the Ukranian photos of Russian missile internals is any help...those Russian phones would likely contain Western silicon scrounged from other Western devices.

      • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
        And a picture of it: http://media.englishrussia.com... [englishrussia.com]

      • by Holi ( 250190 )

        Here

        https://www.indiatimes.com/tec... [indiatimes.com]

        But this is most likely just PR retaliation since Apple no longer sells in Russia.

      • Re: (Score:2, Troll)

        The Russians were at the forefront of manned space flight for over a decade, I think they can handle a smart-phone. That old "Ivan can't build sophisticated stuff" trope was dead by the 80's, but I am sure they don't mind being under estimated by their rivals.

        • by hawk ( 1151 )

          The "sophistication" of Ivan's stuff was *far* behind its contemporary US counterparts. They just got there anyway with a lower tech level.

          The Apollo-Soyuz rendezvous required the Soyuz to reach a higher altitude than for which it was designed, while the Apollo had to make it to a lower altitude. And the Apollo astronauts were stunned see the use of vacuum tubes.

          Soviet PCB technology was the equal of US.

          And they took vacuum tube technology past where we did. They weren't ahead of us; we just dropped it

    • by chill ( 34294 )

      Russia doesn't have the tech to even assemble, much less fully manufacture a domestic smart phone. Nobody inside Russia is going to want the equivalent of a Lada phone. And as iPhones are status symbols, the oligarchs, high ranking gov't people, and their families are all going to want the latest iPhone or Samsung.

    • by Bert64 ( 520050 )

      They don't, western phone brands including apple are technically banned from being used for official purposes. They have a policy to use phones either produced locally, or from non-hostile countries such as china.
      Either people are not following the policy, or these are personal devices that shouldn't be used for official purposes.

      • by Espen ( 96293 )

        They have a policy to use phones either produced locally, or from non-hostile countries such as china.

        Seriously?! The Russians might appreciate the non-hostility of the Chinese; but don’t confuse that with trusting them.

    • Phone is potato.

      Sorry... the meme should die. But Russian-made phones? What if I want... data?

      • by davidwr ( 791652 )

        What if I want... data?

        In Soviet, er, Putinist Russia, DATA WANTS YOU!

        The non-joke version: Data-collectors in the Kremlin want you, and your little data in toto too!

    • Pretty special in a way... Chinese people are using iPhone for symbols, and American people are using xiaomi/poco/umidigi for the price
  • When Boris Badenov [wikipedia.org] tried to send American secrets back to Fearless Leader [wikipedia.org], he used his trusty hard to hack from far away spy telephone [wikipedia.org] along with super-secure encryption [wikipedia.org].

    Or at least that was the plan.

    But our [wikipedia.org] heroes [wikipedia.org] accidentally switched Boris's secret codebook for this one [wikipedia.org] which meant not only did the Fearless Leader not understand him, but members of the Radio Orphan Annie's Secret Society [wikipedia.org] older than about 7 probably could.

  • Good to know the rest of us are not vulnerable by this NSA back door.
  • Blackberry running on your own BES servers so you can see whats going on.
  • Side hustle! (Score:4, Insightful)

    by aldousd666 ( 640240 ) on Thursday June 01, 2023 @02:44PM (#63568287) Journal
    They could sell this just as a jailbreak. Pay us $20 and well send you a text to get you root on your iPhone.
  • I trust Appleâ(TM)s ability to avoid âparser bugsâ(TM) that lead to RCEâ(TM)s as much as slashdotâ(TM)s
  • We've been hearing about "zero day" attacks for some time now. This is the *new* zero...zero click!

Some people manage by the book, even though they don't know who wrote the book or even what book.

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