A security researcher has published attack code he said makes it easy to steal the iCloud passwords of people using the latest version of Apple iOS for iPhones and iPads.
The proof-of-concept attack exploits a flaw in Mail.app, the default iOS e-mail program. Since the release of version 8.3 in early April, the app has failed to properly strip out potentially dangerous HTML code from incoming e-mail messages. The proof-of-concept exploit capitalizes on this failure by downloading a form from a remote server that looks identical to the legitimate iCloud log-in prompt. It can be displayed each time the booby-trapped message is viewed.
(Score: 2) by darkfeline on Saturday June 13 2015, @02:36AM
From the article, it is NORMAL for the mail app to randomly prompt for your iCloud password. So an intelligent user wouldn't be crazy to enter his info into such a prompt. The prompt is also identical in appearance. The "fix" for this exploit is: don't enter your iCloud password while you have an email open (seriously).
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