
Apple exaggerates safety
Insecurity expert Nicolas Seriot told the Black Hat
Conference in Washington that Apple's iPhone security was not as good as Jobs'
Mob has been claiming.
The iPhone uses a sandboxing technology to restrict
applications to operating system resources with a list of deny/allow rules at
the kernel level, However Seriot said these and other permissions are "way
too loose," and "Apple should not claim that an application cannot
access data from another application."
Seriot said that iPhone apps, including one called Aurora
Feint and another called mogoRoad, that made it into Apple's App Store before
being de-listed for privacy violations showed that Apple reviewers can be
fooled.
With more than 34 million devices in the market, the
iPhone is an appealing target for hackers. Seriot has found in his own investigation that sensitive
personal data can be picked up just building an application using the known
iPhone APIs.
Apple should build something akin to an application
firewall for the iPhone so that the user can be informed when certain actions
start to occur so he can prevent them from happening, such as an app trying to
edit the address book.