Comment by I_Am_Nous
2 years ago
>Although infections didn’t survive a reboot
Reminder to reboot your iPhone at least weekly if you are concerned about this kind of attack.
2 years ago
>Although infections didn’t survive a reboot
Reminder to reboot your iPhone at least weekly if you are concerned about this kind of attack.
In a week, a lot of data can be exfiltrated. Then after you have rebooted, the threat actor reinfects your device.
Frequently rebooting the device can’t hurt but it likely isn’t going to prevent a threat actor from achieving their objectives.
The best mitigation we have is to enable lockdown mode.
Why not both? Lockdown + frequent reboots.
How frequent?
1 reply →
> reboot your iPhone at least weekly
with the Hard Reset key sequence, https://www.wikihow.com/Hard-Reset-an-iPhone
Sorry for the lay question but what’s the benefit of the hard reset over a general restart?
Layperson here so just guessing. If not using the hard reset method, the exploit might fake the reboot sequence to maintain its own persistence. AFAIK, a hard reset is built in hardware and thus impossible to fake.
I believe they’re assuming that malware can do a pretend reboot whereas the hardware keystroke can’t be faked.
[dead]
No, they could monitor when devices rebooted and re-infect them immediately, as the article states.