Over the last couple of days, a group of iOS developers has been
targeted with a series of rapid-fire texts sent over Apple’s iMessage
system. The messages, likely transmitted via the OS X Messages app using
a simple AppleScript, rapidly fill up the Messages app on iOS or the
Mac with text, forcing a user to constantly clear both notifications and
messages.
In some instances, the messages can be so large that they completely
lock up the Messages app on iOS, constituting a ‘denial of service’
(DoS) attack of sorts, even though in this case they appear to be a
prank. Obviously, if the messages are repeated an annoyingly large
volume but don’t actually crash the app, they’re still limiting the use
you’ll get out of the service. But if a string that’s complex enough to
crash the app is sent through, that’s a more serious issue.
The attacks hit at least a half-dozen iOS developer and hacker
community members that we know of now, and appear to have originated
with a Twitter account involved in selling UDIDs, provisioning profiles
and more that facilitate in the installation of pirated App Store apps
which are re-signed and distributed. The information about the source of
the attacks was shared by one of the victims, iOS jailbreak tool and
app developer iH8sn0w.
“On Wednesday night my private iMessage handle got flooded with “Hi”
and “We are anonymous” bulls**t,” iH8sn0w tells us. He immediately
disabled that iMessage email and began tracking the sending email
domain’s current ownership. iH8sn0w shared a proof-of-concept
AppleScript with us that demonstrates just how easy it is to set up a
recurring message that could saturate a person’s iMessage queue with
items that would need to be cleared or read before any actions could be
taken.
Another iOS developer targeted, Grant Paul, shared some additional details about the attacks.
“What’s happening is a simple flood: Apple doesn’t seem to limit how
fast messages can be sent, so the attacker is able to send thousands of
messages very quickly,” Paul says.
The second part of that, he explains, is that if a user sends a
‘complex’ text message using unicode characters that force a browser to
render ‘Zalgo’ text,
or simply uses a message that is enormous in size, them the Messages
app will eventually crash as it fails to display it properly. This will
effectively ‘break’ the Messages app on iOS by forcing it to close and
stop it from re-opening because it can’t render that text.”
A small section of a ‘large’ unicode text block that could crash Messages
The ‘send a big message to crash the app’ method has been known for a
while, as we were able to locate a month-old public posting that
detailed an accidental triggering of this. The solutions involve playing
around with sending a regular message, then locking the phone and
activating the message notification until you’re able to time it right
to delete the message thread that’s causing the problem. This is the way
that Paul was able to finally delete the complex text that was causing
him problems.
Several of the developers we spoke to noted that multiple ‘throwaway’
emails were being used to send the spam, so while a simple ‘block’
option might work for a casual spammer, they wouldn’t work for a
determined harasser.
iH8sn0w notes that there is a possibility that Apple will notice these bursts of messages and block the repetitive spamming.
This appears to be the only real solution as Apple does not currently
allow you to block a specific iMessage sender. Once your iMessage ID is
out there, you’re unable to stop people from using it. And since the
latest version of iOS unifies your phone number and emails, there’s a
strong possibility that if a person can ferret out your email, they can
spam you with this annoying or disruptive technique.
The only recourse right now is to disable that iMessage handle
entirely. And if they get your phone number, it’s likely you’ll have to
turn off iMessage entirely, because you can’t just change your phone
number at the drop of a hat. Thankfully, this doesn’t seem to be a
widespread practice, but it’s not that hard to figure out, and the only
real solution will be the introduction of a block setting for Messages
and better spam detection by Apple.
We have informed Apple about the technique used in these cases but it
has not responded with more information. We will update the article if
it does so.
Screenshot of the issue via Adam Bell.
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