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A Basic iPhone Feature Helps Criminals Steal Your Entire Digital Life

wsj.com

19 points by gleb 3 years ago · 5 comments

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gnicholas 3 years ago

> Using a remarkably low-tech trick, thieves watch iPhone owners tap their passcodes, then steal their targets’ phones—and their digital lives.

Ever since TouchID was introduced, I rarely type my passcode (and never in public). How are thieves finding people who need to enter their passcode, and then watching them enter it?

  • nailer 3 years ago

    Cinemas and planes?

  • sitzkrieg 3 years ago

    let alone faceid!

    • gnicholas 3 years ago

      TFA actually gives some social engineering examples, like using someone's phone to take a photo or look at a photo, then turning the phone off before handing it back. That triggers a password prompt when the phone is turned on again. Some thieves even use hidden cameras to observe password entry.

      Guess it's time to tell my kids never to type their password in public!

justinclift 3 years ago

https://archive.is/eEt4B

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