Hackers threaten to wipe “hundreds of millions” of iPhones, Apple says they can't
The hacker group claimed to have access to over 300 million Apple accounts (including @icloud.com accounts), some of the group claimed 559 million accounts. They demanded that Apple give them $75,000 in Bitcoin, Ether, or $100,000 in iTunes gift cards. Apple was given until 7 April to respond.
The hack is a double-edged sword for Apple: It validates its years-long campaign against jailbreaking, saying users who do so are violating their terms of service and opening their phones up to attackers. At the same time, it underscores how security flaws can be exploited by hackers, putting the words "iPhone" and "hacked" together in a story.
Apple,
which is expected to announce new iPhones next week, took this opportunity to remind people this is why its phones come with security systems in the first place. "To protect our users from malware, we curate App Store content and ensure all apps in the App Store adhere to our developer guidelines," an Apple representative said regarding the hack, which researchers are calling KeyRaider.
As a result, warning users not to jailbreak their phones doesn't do enough to protect their devices from hacking threats, said Adam Ely, an executive at Bluebox, a company that helps app developers protect their services from the abuses of hackers.
The reason, according to Stephen Coty, an executive at cybersecurity company Alert Logic, is that people will remain curious about what Apple isn't allowing people to do on their devices. Additionally, Apple users may want apps that the company won't make available, or they might just want to see how the gizmo works from the inside, he said.
Coty himself has disabled security protocols on some devices so that he could install cybersecurity testing tools for his work.
So, what of all the people who have jailbroken their phones?
Coty said they shouldn't feel like they're constantly about to be hacked. There are plenty of cybersecurity apps that can help protect the phone, once it's been jailbroken.
"If you're going to jailbreak and make those changes," he said, "you should also secure yourself."