Apple to introduce new feature that makes life harder for iPhone thieves
Apple has plans to make it harder for iPhone thieves to steal your personal information even if they have your device’s passcode.
Apple has plans to make it harder for iPhone thieves to steal your personal information even if they have your device’s passcode.
Apple has changed its legal process guidelines to reflect it now requires a judge’s order to hand over information about its customers’ push notifications.
Apple has issued emergency updates that include patches for older iOS devices concerning two actively used zero-days that were patched for iOS 17 last week
I’m trying to create a persistence module for OSX systems but first I need to create a reverse shell that spawns and binds on the same computer over a LAN. I’m having trouble creating an executable with msfvenom, the system I’m developing …
Apple has released an emergency security update for two zero-day vulnerabilities which may have already been exploited.
I am trying to determine if there is a benefit to using the GMail app over the built in iOS one when it comes to security. I know that both store data locally on the phone, but the question is whether that data is encrypted? I cannot find …
Browser push notifications are becoming a problem on macOS. Learn how to remove them.
Apple Silicon-based Macs have a LocalPolicy file that controls the secure boot process. To prevent replay attacks of the LocalPolicy, hashes of nonces are used. From here:
The lpnh is used for anti-replay of the LocalPolicy. This is an SH…
Categories: Exploits and vulnerabilities Categories: News Tags: Apple Tags: iOS Tags: iPad Tags: 17.0.3 Tags: CVE-2023-42824 Tags: CVE-2023-5217 Apple has issued an emergency update to patch two vulnerabilities, including an actively exploited one. |
The post Update now! Apple patches vulnerabilities on iPhone and iPad appeared first on Malwarebytes Labs.
Categories: Android Categories: Apple Categories: Exploits and vulnerabilities Tags: Pegasus Tags: spyware Tags: nso Tags: webp Tags: libwebp Tags: buffer overflow The company behind the infamous Pegasus spyware used a vulnerability in almost every browser to plant their malware on victim’s devices. |
The post Pegasus spyware and how it exploited a WebP vulnerability appeared first on Malwarebytes Labs.