Apple says it hasn’t been breached after hacker group threatens to wipe millions of iPhones
Apple has poured water on claims by a hacker group that it has gained access to hundreds of millions of iCloud accounts. In a statement provided to Fortune,
an Apple spokesperson said that none of the company’s systems —
including iCloud and Apple ID — had been breached, and that the alleged
list of email addresses and passwords “appears to have been obtained
from previously compromised third-party services."
Motherboard
first reported that a group calling itself the Turkish Crime Family was
claiming to have stolen details for upwards of 300 million iCloud
accounts in a bid to extort money from Apple. The group reportedly
demanded $75,000 in either Bitcoin or fellow cryptocurrency Ethereum, or
$100,000 of iTunes gift cards by April 7th, or else it would reset
iCloud accounts and remotely wipe Apple devices.
"I just want my money and thought this would be an
interesting report that a lot of Apple customers would be interested in
reading and hearing," a self-described member of the group told Motherboard.
The Turkish Crime Family said it had gained access to hundreds of
millions of accounts, but wasn’t consistent with the details — one
member of the group said 300 million, while another quoted 559 million.
According to Fortune, one of the compromised
third-party services Apple mentions in its statement is likely to be
LinkedIn, with many of the addresses and passwords in the Turkish Crime
Family’s list corresponding with ones stolen during a massive security
breach of the business networking site in 2012.
The group wouldn’t be the first to repurpose LinkedIn’s data to target
other companies: hackers have continued to use the data for nefarious
purposes, either directly testing passwords to gain access to other
services, or by presenting the logins as newly stolen information.
In communications with Motherboard, the hacker
group allegedly showed a YouTube video in which one of its members
accessing a woman’s iCloud account, giving them access to her photos, as
well as the chance to remotely wipe the device. But it’s not clear
whether this procedure was staged, and if it wasn’t, whether the group
could replicate the process across its entire data set.
Even if the information is new and legitimate, Apple says
it’s watching iCloud closely, “actively monitoring to prevent
unauthorized access to user accounts,” while also working with law
enforcement to work out who was behind the threats. “To protect against
these type of attacks,” the company says, “we always recommend that
users always use strong passwords, not use those same passwords across
sites, and turn on two-factor authentication."
The article was published on : theverge
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