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?????????????????????????????????????????????????Monday, August 29, 2016
Update Your iPhone or iPad : Israeli Cyber-spy Firm Can Hack You
Researchers said spyware had never been found before this month that could “jailbreak” an iPhone or iPad and seize total control of its functions.
Courtesy: McClatchy
( August 29, 2016, Boston, Sri Lanka Guardian) The
much-talked-about hack that would allow governments to spy on your every
move through your iPhone and iPad has become reality.
Apple issued a security update for those devices Thursday after
researchers discovered spyware that turns hand-held Apple devices into
the mother of all snoops, allowing remote operators to intercept all
voice and data communications and pass along every photograph and video.
Researchers said spyware had never been found before this month that
could “jailbreak” an iPhone or iPad and seize total control of its
functions.
Efforts to use the spyware have surfaced in Mexico and the United Arab
Emirates, where critics of the government appear to have been targeted
for surveillance.
“There’s pretty much nothing that this spyware couldn’t get off the iPhone,” said Bill Marczak, one of two researchers at the Citizen Lab at the University of Toronto who discovered the spyware. “It’s a total and complete compromise of the phone.”
Thursday’s development is a hit on the reputation of Apple products as
largely hack-proof, and it raises questions over whether the spyware is
in widespread use by authoritarian governments around the world.
The Israeli company thought to have produced the spyware said in a
statement that it insisted that governments that bought its products use
them only in lawful ways. Coding in the spyware indicates it has been
around since 2013.
The spyware’s existence also calls into question the security of widely
used encrypted communications programs such as WhatsApp and Telegram,
both of whose contents can be intercepted on a compromised device before
they are scrambled, according to a San Francisco cyber forensics company, Lookout, that joined Citizen Lab in the probe.
The story of how the researchers uncovered the spyware and the evidence of its use is worthy of a spy novel itself.
Marczak and a colleague, John Scott-Railton, began tracking the spyware,
which they call the Trident exploit, after a human rights defender in
the United Arab Emirates alerted researchers to suspicious text
messages.
The rights activist, Ahmed Mansoor, received a text message on his
iPhone on the morning of Aug. 10. It said in Arabic: “New secrets about
torture of Emiratis in state prisons,” and contained a hyperlink to an
unknown site. A similar text message arrived the next day.
Mansoor was wary. He’d already been targeted by other attempts. In all
cases, the text messages were bait to get him to click on a link, which
would have led to the infection of his Apple iPhone 6 and the control of
the device through spying software created by NSO Group, a shadowy
Israeli surveillance company, Marczak said.
Marczak and his colleague infected a test iPhone of their own and
“watched as unknown software was remotely implanted on our phone,” the
two said in a report. They then contacted Lookout to help in
reverse-engineering the spyware.
They quickly learned that the infection would have turned Mansoor’s
iPhone into a pocket undercover spy “capable of employing his iPhone’s
camera and microphone to eavesdrop on activity in the vicinity of the
device, recording his WhatsApp and Viber calls, logging messages sent in
mobile chat apps and tracking his movements.” Viber is another common
communications program.
NSO Group, based in Herzliya, on the northern outskirts of Tel Aviv, was
founded in 2010 and describes itself as a leader in “cyber warfare” and
a vendor of surveillance software to governments around the world. It
maintains no website and keeps a low profile.
The Citizen Lab report said NSO Group had been sold to a San Francisco
private equity group, Francisco Partners Management LLC, in 2014. A call
of inquiry to that group led an NSO Group spokesman, Zamir Dahbash, to
call McClatchy.
Infection can turn an iPhone into a pocket undercover spy capable of
using the camera and microphone to eavesdrop – recording calls, logging
messages and tracking movements
He offered a statement that said the company’s mission was “to help make
the world a safer place” and that it sold only to authorized government
agencies to help them “combat terror and crime.” NSO Group does not
operate any of its systems, he said, only selling the software.
“The agreements signed with the company’s customers require that the
company’s products only be used in a lawful manner. Specifically, the
products may only be used for the prevention and investigation of
crimes,” Dahbash said.
He would answer no further questions and would not confirm that the
company had contracts with any agencies of the UAE government or with
the government of Mexico, where another case emerged of efforts to
infect iPhones with NSO spyware.\
As the researchers traced the activities of their own infected iPhone,
it led to an infrastructure of some 200 websites and servers used by NSO
Group. The team then punched in the internet addresses to Google and
Twitter “to see if anybody was sharing links to them,” Marczak said.
That’s when they came across a tweet by Rafael Cabrera, a Mexican editor who works forAristegui Online,
a muckraking portal that has repeatedly broken stories on alleged
influence trafficking by President Enrique Peña Nieto and his wife.
Cabrera noted in the tweet that he’d gotten a “weird” text message that
seemed to bait him to click on a suspicious link.
“We realized, oh my gosh, this guy received links which were connected
to these websites that we connected to NSO Group,” Marczak said.
Cabrera, trapped in a traffic jam in Mexico City, said in a brief
cellular phone interview that three members of Aristegui Online had been
targeted with the text messages. In addition to himself, the portal’s
lead investigator, Daniel Lizarraga, and another prominent journalist,
Salvador Camarena, received texts.
All were on the team that in November 2014 revealed that Peña Nieto’s
wife had received a $7 million mansion from one of the government’s
biggest contractors. The team also took part, along with McClatchy and
scores of other media outlets around the world, in the probe of the
Panama Papers, the trove of documents from a Panamanian law firm that
opened a window earlier this year on the murky world of offshore shell
companies.
Among the revelations from the documents was
that the contractor who had built the mansion for the Mexican first
lady had also sought to create a string of offshore trusts and companies
to hide more than $100 million.
Cabrera said he could not pin blame on who might have wanted to spy on his iPhone.
“I can’t say if it was an individual or if it was the government,” Cabrera said.
The type of spyware sold by NSO Group routinely costs at least $1
million, according to a report by Lookout, making it a tool available
mainly to governments.
Apple Inc. was notified by Citizen Lab and Lookout on Aug. 15 of the
vulnerability in the iPhones and iPads, and it said the security update
provided Thursday blocked the use of Trident spyware.
“We advise all of our customers to always download the latest version of
iOS to protect themselves against potential security exploits,” Apple
spokesman Fred Sainz said in an email.
But Marczak said Apple devices, like all others, faced an increasing
onslaught from malware. “Nothing is hack-proof, really,” he said.
“There’s always ways into these devices.”
See also
How to update your iPhone: Apple’s
patch targets previously unknown spyware that infiltrated iPhones and
can read messages, track calls and contacts, record sounds, collect
passwords and location information, investigators told the Times