Apple AirTags quirk could be used to steal the data of helpful citizens

Apple has acknowledged the issue and promised to deliver a fix soon

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A bug in theAppleAirTagcould be exploited by malicious users to inadvertently lure good samaritans into aphishingscheme.

When put in the “Lost Mode”, the AirTag will spit a small personalized URL and message whenever it is scanned by the NFC-enabledAndroidoriPhoneof whoever finds the lost tracker.

Cybersecurityresearchers however discovered that the Lost Mode doesn’t stop the users from injecting arbitrary code into its phone number field. This shortcoming can be exploited by attackers to take the helpful samaritan to a fake AppleiCloudpage, and phish their credentials.

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“A victim will believe they are being asked to sign intoiCloudso they can get in contact with the owner of the Airtag, when in fact, the attacker has redirected them to a credential hijacking page,”wroteBobby Rauch who discovered the flaw.

Weaponized trackers

Weaponized trackers

Rauch reported the issue to Apple several months ago, but the company only confirmed it would address the issue last week.

Describing the bug as a stored cross site scripting (stored XSS) vulnerability, Rauch says it can be used for other attacks such as session token hijacking, or clickjacking.

“An attacker can create weaponized AirTags, and leave them around, victimizing innocent people who are simply trying to help a person find their lost AirTag,” suggests Rauch, who has shared detailed steps to create such a weaponized AirTag.

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With almost two decades of writing and reporting on Linux, Mayank Sharma would like everyone to think he’sTechRadar Pro’sexpert on the topic. Of course, he’s just as interested in other computing topics, particularly cybersecurity, cloud, containers, and coding.

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