There's a bug that makes it fairly trivial for someone to cause problems with Wi-Fi on The Intern - A Summer of LustiOS devices. Discovered by security researcher Carl Schou, all it takes is creating a public Wi-Fi hotspot with a specifically crafted name, and when someone with an iOS device connects to it, boom: Their Wi-Fi is disabled.
The weird thing about this bug is that it's been discovered and publicly shared a few weeks ago, and there's still no word about a fix coming.
Schou originally tweeted about the issue on June 19. If an iOS device connects to a Wi-Fi network called "%p%s%s%s%s%n", its Wi-Fi will get disabled. Judging by comments from others, what happens from there can be quite different, depending on unknown factors: Some people have been able to enable the Wi-Fi on their devices simply by resetting network settings. For others — Schou included — this didn't work, and neither did restarting the iPhone.
Several outlets, including 9to5Mac, have picked up the news back then. It appears that the bug has to do with the syntax of some programming languages, where "%(character)" is a string format specifier. It's a fairly common type of bug, where a character string that's used in programming mistakenly ends up somewhere where it can cause trouble, causing an app to crash.
As others experimented with the bug, it turned out that you can use other network names to produce the same effect; Schou proposed "%secretclub%power", and Security researcher Alex Skalozub, who spoke with The Register, said a name like "%Free %Coffee at %Starbucks" would also work.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This makes the issue a bit more serious, as it's fairly easy to concoct a Wi-Fi network name that sounds like something you'd want to connect to. Though it doesn't appear the bug can be used to steal your data or anything nefarious like that, a prankster could set up a public Wi-Fi network that would mess up the iPhones of everyone that connected to it — and with the right name, it could take in a lot of people.
SEE ALSO: How to turn off location services on an iPhoneBringing this story back into attention was Schou's tweet on Sunday that he still hasn't been able to fix his Wi-Fi. Ultimately, he did it by manually editing an iPhone backup, and removing the offending Wi-Fi network names from the "known networks" .plist — something a typical iPhone user certainly isn't eager to do. Another user suggests removing the offending Wi-Fi network name from iCloud Keychain on a Mac.
While it's comforting to know that a fix for this bug exists, it'd be nice if Apple fixed it on their end. Schou says he contacted Apple about the issue but hasn't heard back. We've done the same and will update this article when we hear from Apple.
Topics iPhone
A goofy online quiz told Chrissy Teigen she married the wrong John'Dexter: New Blood' finale was the only way Dexter Morgan's story could have endedDavid Attenborough's VR project 'Hold the World' is absolutely astonishingAnother sinkhole is attempting to swallow Donald Trump, but everything's *fineTwitter is no longer banned in NigeriaGiant, ominous bird lands on this girl's shoulders and it's the most goth thingMassive volcano eruption near Tonga captured in eyeMorgan Freeman will now be the voice of the Vancouver transit systemDonald 'Pump' Jr. is posting thirst traps nowThis woman sent a seriously creative job application to Spotify and it actually workedTrump's staffers reportedly pepper his tweets with grammatical errorsThe key to union organizing: Tech workers in warehouses and offices joining togetherDeformed exoplanet WASPA Google Street View car captured photo of escaped mafia memberThe best tech of CES 2022'MacGruber' star Will Forte will host 'Saturday Night Live'The Parkland students stopped a grocery chain from donating to the NRAWhat is an AirTag?A goofy online quiz told Chrissy Teigen she married the wrong JohnTinder 'Places' finds you a date based on your regular hang out spots TSMC to eat costs of defective 3nm chips under new agreement with Apple · TechNode Evergrande Auto resumes trading in Hong Kong, sees a 68.44% share price drop · TechNode India advises Tesla to copy Apple in pairing Chinese suppliers in India · TechNode Temu launches in South Korea · TechNode Chinese tech giants place $5 billion orders with Nvidia for generative AI chips · TechNode Vivo introduces self Foxconn’s EV platform unit targets India, Thailand to produce small EVs · TechNode China unveils detailed steps to stimulate private sector · TechNode Chinese AI startup Baichuan rolls out third LLM in four months · TechNode China asks tech giants to showcase startup investments · TechNode DJI launches new drone Air 3 with dual cameras · TechNode Shein achieves record profitability in H1 · TechNode BYD’s Denza launches third model after rebranding · TechNode WeChat beta tests Xiaohongshu Chinese battery maker Sunwoda to establish production base in Hungary · TechNode Biden imposes restrictions on US investment in China’s sensitive tech industry · TechNode Bertelsmann Investments commits $700 million to Chinese start Alibaba Cloud adds Meta’s AI model Llama2 for use by local developers · TechNode Major Ant Group investors exit Chinese fintech giant’s share buyback plan · TechNode Chinese tech giants donate over RMB 370 million to aid flood
0.8263s , 8228.5703125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【The Intern - A Summer of Lust】,Inspiration Information Network