Feb 2, 2012

iOS 5 Bug: Others Can Read Your iMessages Even Swapped SIM Cards

Summary : Are you a user of the iMessage App? Then you should be care about this new iOS but. The bug apparently reveals iMessage to be in contact with an inserted SIM card, and even after the SIM is removed, iMessage conversations from said SIM can still be read.


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  • Current Device: HTC Chacha
  • Future Device: iPhone 5.6.7.8...iPad 2.3.4.5...
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iMessage was one of the key improvements in the firmware update, allowing iDevices users to communicate for free in an SMS-like infrastructure – much like BlackBerry Messenger and WhatsApp have been doing for a number of years. Providing there is a Wi-Fi or cellular connection available, messages can readily be sent back and forth, with color coordination used to differentiate between a normal message, and an iMessage.
Now though, critical error in iMessage’s make-up has now been glaringly uncovered, courtesy of Gizmodo. The bug apparently reveals iMessage to be in contact with an inserted SIM card, and even after the SIM is removed, iMessage conversations from said SIM can still be read.
The story goes; a young boy visited an Apple Store to get his iPhone looked in to, and one of the branch’s employees took the device out to the back, returning with an apparently repaired iPhone. However, at some stage whilst in the back room, the Apple staffer named "Wiz" had inserted his own SIM in, which for the benefit of testing, wouldn’t normally pose a problem – after all, remove the SIM, and it’s like it was never there, right?
Well, not exactly, no. This boy began to receive a number of Wiz’s iMessages over the following days, whilst the Apple employee was unwittingly sharing his private correspondence with a customer.
The story seems to confirm that iMessage checks any inserted SIM when initializing iMessage. Whilst most of us don’t readily swap SIM cards in the manner of which, say, an Apple employee does, it’s certainly discomforting to know that we could pass devices on to friends, family members, or via eBay, and our private messages could still be transferred to that device.
We had a post about how to protect your iMessage in case your iPhone get lost. Well it seems that's a necessary tip. Leave your thoughts about the issue through the usual mediums jot down below.
via redmondpie

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