Hackers can easily unlock the screen of Apple iPhone due to a security flaw, a report has said.
A majority of iPhone users have added a four-digit security pin code to prevent unauthorised users from accessing their phone.
But
a new loophole in the latest 6.1 iOS software now means that anyone can
bypass it and access email, contacts, text messages, voice mail and
even video calling, the Telegraph reports.
Techcrunch, a gadget blog, called the exploit "a massive backdoor to some of the iPhone's core functions".
Posted
on YouTube by a blogger identifying themselves only as
VideosdeBarraquito, the Apple hack has been viewed by nearly 4,000
people, and replicates a similar flaw with earlier software, iOS 4.1.
According
to the paper, the process can be triggered by aborting an emergency
call and then executing a dozen simple button presses to fool the device
into keeping the iPhone open.
The flaw means
that the iPhone opens the phone app, giving access to the main systems
including call logs and messages, the paper said.
It relies on precise timing, but can easily be replicated by any user, it added.
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