Following yesterday's release of iOS 6.1.3, which fixed two bugs allowing the iPhone's passcode lock to be bypassed, another passcode security flaw has been
discovered.
The vulnerability, which only affects the
iPhone 4, involves the Voice Dial command, as demonstrated in the video below
from YouTube user videosdebarraquito.
iPhoneinCanada tested the method in the video using an iPhone 4 running iOS 6.1.3 and
found that the security flaw does indeed exist, giving a potential intruder
access to both contacts and photos.
Like the previous passcode vulnerability, the
current hack involves a complicated set of steps that includes initiating Voice
Dial command and quickly ejecting the phone's SIM card.
When the SIM card is removed, the phone opens
the recent call log, which gives access to the contact list. In the contact
list, adding a photo also gives access to all of the pictures on the device.
The previous passcode vulnerability was
discovered in mid-February, and it took Apple more than a month to push a fix.
An update for the current bypass could follow a similar timeline, but the
vulnerability can be fixed by disabling Voice Dial from the Passcode Lock menu.
At this time, the vulnerability has only been
shown to work with the iPhone 4. We were unable to reproduce the results with
an iPhone 5 with Siri disabled, though the bug may potentially affect the
pre-Siri iPhone 3GS as well.
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