Skip to main content

A Bug in iOS 15 Is Leaking User Browsing Activity in Real Time

posted onJanuary 19, 2022
by l33tdawg
Flickr
Credit: Flickr

For the past four months, Apple’s iOS and iPadOS devices and Safari browser have violated one of the internet’s most sacrosanct security policies. The violation results from a bug that leaks user identities and browsing activity in real time.

The same-origin policy is a foundational security mechanism that forbids documents, scripts, or other content loaded from one origin—meaning the protocol, domain name, and port of a given webpage or app—from interacting with resources from other origins. Without this policy, malicious sites—say, badguy.example.com—could access login credentials for Google or another trusted site when it’s open in a different browser window or tab.

Since September’s release of Safari 15 and iOS and iPadOS 15, this policy has been broken wide open, research published late last week found. As a demo site graphically reveals, it’s trivial for one site to learn the domains of sites open in other tabs or windows, as well as user IDs and other identifying information associated with the other sites. “The fact that database names leak across different origins is an obvious privacy violation,” Martin Bajanik, a researcher at security firm FingerprintJS, wrote. He continued:

Source

Tags

Security

You May Also Like

Recent News

Friday, November 8th

Friday, November 1st

Tuesday, July 9th

Wednesday, July 3rd

Friday, June 28th

Thursday, June 27th

Thursday, June 13th

Wednesday, June 12th

Tuesday, June 11th

Friday, June 7th