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IDemo

(16,926 posts)
Wed Jun 17, 2015, 11:01 PM Jun 2015

Serious OS X and iOS flaws let hackers steal keychain, 1Password contents

Researchers have uncovered huge holes in the application sandboxes protecting Apple's OS X and iOS operating systems, a discovery that allows them to create apps that pilfer iCloud, Gmail, and banking passwords and can also siphon data from 1Password, Evernote, and other apps.

The malicious proof-of-concept apps were approved by the Apple Store, which requires all qualifying submissions to treat every other app as untrusted. Despite the supposed vetting by Apple engineers, the researchers' apps were able to bypass sandboxing protections that are supposed to prevent one app from accessing the credentials, contacts, and other resources belonging to another app. Like Linux, Android, Windows, and most other mainstream OSes, OS X and iOS strictly limit app access for the purpose of protecting them against malware. The success of the researchers' cross-app resource access—or XARA—attacks, raises troubling doubts about those assurances on the widely used Apple platforms.

"The consequences are dire," they wrote in a research paper titled Unauthorized Cross-App Resource Access on MAC OS X and iOS. "For example, on the latest Mac OS X 10.10.3, our sandboxed app successfully retrieved from the system's keychain the passwords and secret tokens of iCloud, email and all kinds of social networks stored there by the system app Internet Accounts, and bank and Gmail passwords from Google Chrome." Referring to interprocess communication, which is the tightly controlled and Apple-approved mechanism for one app to interact with another and the Bundle ID token used to enforce sandbox policies, the researchers continued:

From various IPC channels, we intercepted user passwords maintained by the popular 1Password app (ranked 3rd by the MAC App Store) and the secret token of Evernote (ranked 3rd in the free “Productivity” apps); also, through exploiting the BID vulnerability, our app collected all the private notes under Evernote and all the photos under WeChat. We reported our findings to Apple and other software vendors, who all acknowledged their importance. We also built an app that captures the attempts to exploit the weaknesses.


http://arstechnica.com/security/2015/06/serious-os-x-and-ios-flaws-let-hackers-steal-keychain-1password-contents/
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Serious OS X and iOS flaws let hackers steal keychain, 1Password contents (Original Post) IDemo Jun 2015 OP
Oops AgingAmerican Jun 2015 #1
Another overhyped, almost impossible to recreate 'hack' only under very specific circumstances. onehandle Jun 2015 #2
Read the article AgingAmerican Jun 2015 #3

onehandle

(51,122 posts)
2. Another overhyped, almost impossible to recreate 'hack' only under very specific circumstances.
Wed Jun 17, 2015, 11:11 PM
Jun 2015

You basically have to have the 'hacker' standing over your shoulder.

 

AgingAmerican

(12,958 posts)
3. Read the article
Wed Jun 17, 2015, 11:34 PM
Jun 2015

The 'hacker' doesn't have to be within 1000 miles of the victim. You must be a MAC person.

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