| | |
Safari DoS vulnerability could crash your Apple iPhone
According to IT Pro the Apple iPhone is vulnerable to Denial of Service attacks. These can occur when an iPhone user opens a JavaScript containing HTML page which triggers the vulnerability. An application Denial of Service attack can then crash the Safari browser on the phone, and quite possibly the iPhone itself.
The vulnerability actually lies with the Safari web browser that is used within the latest version 1.1.4 of the Apple iPhone software, and has been uncovered by integrated application delivery solutions outfit Radware which funnily enough is also offering a solution in the form of its own Security Update Service.
Radware warn that the vulnerability, which obviously has to have a user visiting an 'infected' web page using the iPhone in order to trigger the DoS attack, could be driven by a social engineering exploit using either email or SMS text messaging. The browser is vulnerable due to a design flaw that may be triggered by a series of memory allocation operations on the dynamic memory pool, according to Radware. This in turn can trigger a bug in the garbage collector, and the security hole is currently unpatched.
"While vendors are struggling to push new products and applications, it is evident that security still remains a secondary concern" says the Security Operation Centre Manager at Radware, Itzik Kotler who continues "hackers continue to misappropriate other people's software and their job is made easier by design flaws embedded into software products".
The vulnerability actually lies with the Safari web browser that is used within the latest version 1.1.4 of the Apple iPhone software, and has been uncovered by integrated application delivery solutions outfit Radware which funnily enough is also offering a solution in the form of its own Security Update Service.
Radware warn that the vulnerability, which obviously has to have a user visiting an 'infected' web page using the iPhone in order to trigger the DoS attack, could be driven by a social engineering exploit using either email or SMS text messaging. The browser is vulnerable due to a design flaw that may be triggered by a series of memory allocation operations on the dynamic memory pool, according to Radware. This in turn can trigger a bug in the garbage collector, and the security hole is currently unpatched.
"While vendors are struggling to push new products and applications, it is evident that security still remains a secondary concern" says the Security Operation Centre Manager at Radware, Itzik Kotler who continues "hackers continue to misappropriate other people's software and their job is made easier by design flaws embedded into software products".
0
•
•
•
•
I don't know why people are suffering with unlocking and all the blah blah with apple iphone.
I have a Pocket PC, I used a iphone theme (http://www.iphonethemeforpocketpc.com/) and everything worked like a magic to me. Now I'm having the iphone experience in my Pocket PC.
I have a Pocket PC, I used a iphone theme (http://www.iphonethemeforpocketpc.com/) and everything worked like a magic to me. Now I'm having the iphone experience in my Pocket PC.
| Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
advertising age amd android apple appstore at&t avatar blackberry bluegene browser business cellphone cellphones censorship china chips crime data database development dos economy email encryption energy enterprise facebook firefox games gaming google government hacker hacking hardware ibm ibm.news intel intelibm internet iphone ipod itunes law leopard linux mac malware marketing medicine memory microsoft mobile mozilla mp3 music news openoffice opensource os osx pc porn privacy ps3 recession redhat research russia search security sex smartphone socialnetworking software sony spam stevejobs sun supercomputer supercomputing survey technology trends trojan twitter ubuntu uk video virus vista web windows windows7 working x86 xbox yahoo youtube




