Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Text Bug Crashes iPhones

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Text Bug Crashes iPhones

    By Sarah Perez


    © Provided by TechCrunch

    Apple says today it has a fix in the works for an odd software bug which has been able to crash users’ iPhones when they receive a text message with a specific string of characters. The bug, which involves having users send a string of symbols and Arabic characters to a victim’s iPhone, was first surfaced by the online community Reddit, but news of its existence has now spread around the web.

    According to the MacRumors blog, sending this text string to a user’s iPhone causes the device to crash and then quickly reboot. Afterwards, if the Messages app was opened in list view, it will continue to crash when you try to open it going forward. If it was opened to the conversation view, however, the app will open. But when you try to enter in another conversation, the Messages app will crash again.

    MacRumors reported trying the problem on phones running iOS 8.3.

    So far, a few possible solutions have been suggested, including sending a reply message to fix the problem. Affected users can send another message to themselves (which you can do via Siri or by sharing from within another app, like Photos), or having another person send you a message instead. After you’ve done this, you can go back into the Message app and delete the conversation. AppleCare support reps are also able to help with the problem, and have reportedly been telling customers that the company is working on a solution.

    Not everyone seems to be affected by the bug, which implies that it could be associated only with certain iOS versions and/or a combination of settings which cause the crash to occur. Apple did not explain what was causing the bug, but a Reddit user speculates that it’s related to how banner notifications process Unicode text.

    This is not the first time iOS has been compromised by a bug that’s capable of crashing iPhones by way of a text string. In 2013, others had discovered a text string that could crash Safari, and this also caused the messaging app to crash.

    The Reddit user, who goes by “sickestdancer98,” also noted that this bug has been around since iOS 6 but had not been patched.

    Until the fix is released, you can prevent your iPhone from becoming a victim to this attack (or prank, if you have super great friends) by changing your settings. You can go into “Settings,” “Notifications,” and then “Messages,” and uncheck the “Show in Lockscreen” option while also turning off banner notifications.

    According to an Apple spokesperson, “we are aware of an iMessage issue caused by a specific series of Unicode characters and we will make a fix available in a software update.”

    The company did not elaborate on when that fix would arrive.

    (Image credit, message string: MacRumors)

    Source: http://techcrunch.com/2015/05/27/app...-text-message/
    The Hackmaster

  • #2
    Apple iPhone bug can also affect Twitter and Snapchat

    If you’re a victim of Apple’s text messaging bug and have suffered an iPhone crash, there is more shock in store.

    The bug that can strike with simple text, also affects Twitter and permanently breaks Snapchat text chat.

    The malware causes Apple’s text handling system to choke on certain characters from Arabic, Marathi and Chinese and crashes the iPhone, iPad, Apple Watch or Mac. It also affects apps running on iOS, The Guardian reported.

    The malware message can be sent over Twitter either using direct messages or public mentions.

    If the recipient uses an iPhone and has notifications turned on, a message will instantly crash their smartphone.

    When sent a text chat with the offending string, it permanently crashes the iPhone when the user attempts to read it.

    The bug means that the user cannot open their chat history with the person who sent the message without crashing their iPhone.

    The message cannot be cleared, but other messages can be sent to and received from other contacts.

    Apple issued recovery instructions for its Messages app, which involves using Siri to reply to a message allowing users to then delete that conversation.

    A similar recovery method can use the Photos app to send a picture to a contact and gain access to the message history so it can be deleted.

    The company said that a fix for the bug via a software update will be provided.

    You can disable notifications to protect your device from the mischievous text, but that will not prevent Snapchat and other third-party apps from being disabled.

    Source
    The Hackmaster

    Comment

    Working...
    X