A company that sells spyware and hacking tools to government agencies has published details of a vulnerability in Apple chips that can potentially help hackers unlock older iPhones. This release opens ...
Security researchers just dropped news of a pretty serious hardware vulnerability in some older Apple chips. It affects a bunch of still-popular iPhones, iPads, and other devices, and unfortunately, ...
usbliter8 exploits a hardware flaw in the Synopsys DWC2 USB controller combined with a DART bypass mode in SecureROM on A12, A13, S4, and S5 chips — covering iPhone XR through iPhone 11 series, ...
Previously, A-chips had jailbreak-enabled bugs that could not be fixed by software. Now, for the first time, models up to the iPhone 11 are affected. „checkm8“ is back, this time for newer iPhones: ...
Looking to upgrade your iPhone 11, Apple Watch Series 4, or iPad 8? If you're undecided, researchers from Paradigm Shift have uncovered an "unpatchable" new hardware-based security vulnerability ...
A security flaw in certain iPhones leaves them vulnerable. The flaw affects iPhones with an A12 or A13 processor. The flaw is ROM-based, so Apple can't patch it with a security update. Do you still ...
A new BootROM vulnerability has been discovered in older iPhones using the A12 and A13 chips. It uses a hardware bug in the USB controller to gain access to an iPhone’s startup process. It can’t be ...
The iPhone XR, XS and 11 are among the older models affected by the newly disclosed usbliter8 exploit. Still holding onto an iPhone XS, XR or 11 because it gets the job done? There’s now a good reason ...
Hollywood actor Anton Yelchin had a drive to succeed like few others. Sadly, a freak accident at his own home cut his life—and career—tragically short. Mike Johnson's 'Save America Act' plan backfires ...
Researchers disclosed usbliter8, a SecureROM exploit affecting older Apple devices that can bypass boot protections with physical access. Researchers at cybersecurity firm Paradigm Shift have revealed ...
A new unpatchable Apple chip flaw affects older iPhones with A12 and A13 chips. It doesn’t mean anyone can hack your phone remotely, but it does raise the stakes if your device gets stolen or seized.