![]() ![]() This makes it more dangerous than a normal flaw, since bad actors will potentially have had more than 100 days to become aware of it. It's the same flaw that a Google hacker had previously uncovered, and that was initially fixed with iOS 12.3. Motherboard reported on the flaw a few days ago, after it was identified by security researchers. ![]() We explain what the security issue is, and what steps Apple is taking to address it (again). ![]() Needless to say, Apple is hard at work fixing the issue with a further patch update. Although hacking an iPhone is no easy thing, this security risk makes it theoretically possible for a hacker to jailbreak an iPhone using a compromised app. If your iPhone is running iOS 12.4 - and since it auto-updates, it likely is - then your device will be affected by this flaw. The newest iOS update, iOS 12.4, has accidentally unpatched an old security flaw that it had previously addressed, researchers have found. ![]()
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