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macrumors bot
Original poster
Apr 12, 2001
63,194
30,136



In December, an apparent bug appeared in Apple's iMessage service that allowed iMessages to be sent to a stolen iPhone. The messages can, apparently, continue to be sent and received from the stolen phone after a remote wipe and a SIM card deactivation. This is obviously an unintended action, and though Apple explains the solution to be "toggle iMessage on and off" in the Settings app, that is an impossible act to perform remotely on a stolen phone.

The Next Web today reports of the case of an anonymous Apple customer who had her iPhone stolen and the lengthy discussions she had with Apple afterwards.

imessage400.jpg



After her iPhone was stolen, Customer K had her SIM card deactivated. However, her friends told her that iMessages they sent continued to be delivered to the stolen iPhone because she hadn't invoked Find My iPhone's Remote Wipe feature. Apple's technical support personnel suggested a wide variety of solutions to prevent her messages from being sent to the other iPhone.

Suggestions to reset her Apple ID password, insert her SIM card into another iOS device, among others, made sense. One request, that she contact her friends and tell them to stop sending her iMessages, Customer K thought was completely unreasonable -- not to mention impractical.

Eventually, nearly 6 weeks after her phone was initially stolen, Apple did finally figure out a unique solution:
Apple was finally able to remotely push 'code' out to the stolen iPhone in order to make the problem stop. This was a result of an Apple Engineering Team weighing in on how to solve the issue.
After the problem was finally solved, the customer continued to push Apple on the issue of compensation and was directed to Apple's legal department. She informed Apple Legal that she was troubled by the length of time that it took to prevent the iMessages from going to the stolen phone and wanted compensation for the extensive breach of privacy.

Eventually, after a phone discussion with Apple legal, K was offered an iPod Touch as compensation for her trouble. Apple claimed it would give her a device with which to receive iMessages.

Apple has still not commented on the matter, but one theory is that the iMessage servers permanently link the UDID number of a particular handset to an Apple ID, so it knows what handset to deliver iMessages to. Messages continue to be sent to a stolen iPhone until iMessage is manually toggled on and off -- a task that is impossible to perform on a stolen phone.

Article Link: Apple Compensates Victim of iMessage Bug for Breach of Privacy
 

kolax

macrumors G3
Mar 20, 2007
9,181
115
Should have compensated her with a new iPhone instead of iPod touch. Or if she had already bought a new one, refunded what she paid with an Apple Gift Card.

"Here's an iPod touch so you can receive iMessages again, but don't lose it! We don't want to go through all this again!"
 

BanterClaus

macrumors regular
Feb 19, 2011
195
25
UK
This needs fixing. A simple option on iCloud.com to unlink devices from your iMessages is what should be done in my opinion.
 

acfusion29

macrumors 68040
Nov 8, 2007
3,128
1
Toronto
this story makes absolutely no sense to me..


Apple has still not commented on the matter, but one theory is that the iMessage servers permanently link the UDID number of a particular handset to a phone number, so it knows what handset to deliver iMessages to. Messages continue to be sent to a stolen iPhone until iMessage is manually toggled on and off -- a task that is impossible to perform on a stolen phone.

if her sim card is deactivated, that means her phone number is no longer associated with the sim card. how are messages being sent to the device?
 

goobot

macrumors 603
Jun 26, 2009
6,476
4,360
long island NY
I'm not siding with apple here, but she didn't want to use find my iPhones wipe feature? That seems like that is completely on her. Also see couldn't have just changed her password, and then change it back either? It seems she wasn't that cooperative if I'm reading this correctly.
 
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azentropy

macrumors 601
Jul 19, 2002
4,004
5,328
Surprise
Did she deem changing her password unreasonable, or did that not work?

There should be a better solution but I don't find changing your password to be unreasonable!

Edit:
Ok reading the full article it vaguely explains that changing her password did not solve the issue - strange.
 

IzzyJG99

macrumors 6502
Oct 26, 2007
336
6
....Breach of privacy, a major thing in the eyes of many Judges, and she gets paid off with an iPod Touch? I'd honestly want financial compensation for this if it happened to me.
 

jlgolson

Contributing Editor
Jun 2, 2011
383
8
Durango, CO
Did she deem changing her password unreasonable, or did that not work?

There should be a better solution but I don't find changing your password to be unreasonable!
I edited slightly to clarify that it was only the advice to tell her friends to stop sending her messages that she found unreasonable.

Changing her password was reasonable, but ineffective.
 

joeshmo2010

macrumors 6502a
Jun 25, 2009
564
101
Seattle, WA
Wouldnt someone who steals an iPhone want to restore it anyway to get rid of the other persons stuff? I guess thieves really must be dumber than I thought.
 

d21mike

macrumors 68040
Jul 11, 2007
3,320
356
Torrance, CA
this story makes absolutely no sense to me..
if her sim card is deactivated, that means her phone number is no longer associated with the sim card. how are messages being sent to the device?
iMessage can use your email address as well as your phone number. Like FaceTime.
 

ski1ski1

macrumors regular
Nov 30, 2007
152
0
this story makes absolutely no sense to me..




if her sim card is deactivated, that means her phone number is no longer associated with the sim card. how are messages being sent to the device?

Because unlike regular txt messages, iMessage is linked to the UDID of your phone, not not sim card. This is how it works even via wifi. The phone number or iTunes email address is used as an ID to send/receive iMessages. But there is a major design flaw. Apple uses to the sim card to verify the phone number for iMessage. But it only verifies the sim card upon initial iMessage activation. If the sim card is removed, deactivated, or replaced with a different sim, the Apple servers will still send iMessages to the phone via wifi. Or cellular data, if it has another valid sim card. Even one with a different number. This is because the iMessage phone number is linked on Apple's servers to the UDID of the phone, not the sim. This link on Apple's servers will remain until iMessage is manually deactivated in the phone's settings. Which is impossible if you lose your phone, or already sold it. Apple has known about this design flaw for over two months. I don't understand why Apple still has not fixed this major privacy issue.
 
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ski1ski1

macrumors regular
Nov 30, 2007
152
0
iMessage can use your email address as well as your phone number. Like FaceTime.

It also uses your phone number for an ID as a secondary way to send a iMessage. But the phone number for the device is only checked upon initial iMessage activation via the sim. If the sim is deactivated, replaced, or removed, without you deactivating iMessage in the phone's settings, iMessages will still be sent to the phone via the link on Apple's servers between the phone number and the Phone's UDID. iMessages are sent over wifi or cellular data. That's why even changing you iTunes password still won't stop it, unless the person sending the iMessage is using your iTunes email address as the ID, instead of your phone number.
 
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jamesnajera

macrumors 6502
Oct 5, 2003
463
179
So what are the exact steps I need to do before I sell my iPhone 4 when the iPhone 5 comes out?

Is it remove SIM, turn off iMessage, restore iPhone, turn on iMessage with no SIM?

I think Apple will need to provide detailed instructions on this, because this will be a big issue when the new iPhone comes out.
 

nagromme

macrumors G5
May 2, 2002
12,546
1,196
Let’s hope the lessons learned in this instance turn into a broad, SOP solution.
 

ArtOfWarfare

macrumors G3
Nov 26, 2007
9,541
6,027
Wouldnt someone who steals an iPhone want to restore it anyway to get rid of the other persons stuff? I guess thieves really must be dumber than I thought.

Unless they're of the creepy stalker without any life of their own variety.
 

MarkMS

macrumors 6502a
Aug 30, 2006
992
0
So what are the exact steps I need to do before I sell my iPhone 4 when the iPhone 5 comes out?

Is it remove SIM, turn off iMessage, restore iPhone, turn on iMessage with no SIM?

I think Apple will need to provide detailed instructions on this, because this will be a big issue when the new iPhone comes out.

Yes, I believe that is the way to stop this from happening if you sell the iPhone. The problem becomes more muddied when the iPhone is stolen. Then you can't physically turn off iMessages or remove the SIM. To prevent iMessage from popping up on a stolen iPhone, you need to remote wipe that phone and call AT&T to deactivate the SIM. Not sure how this works (or is a problem) with Verizon/Sprint, but I assume you call them to disable the ESN.

The Verge had a good write up on it a few days ago: http://www.theverge.com/2012/2/3/2766734/accidental-espionage-imessage-iphone-theft-issue
 

TalonFlyer

macrumors member
Apr 23, 2009
58
9
Duh!

If apple was able to "push" code, then they should have disabled the phone completely then. Then the stolen iPhone black market would seize to exist.

EXACTLY!

If my iPhone is stolen, I should be able to file a police report then forward that report to Apple along with a request to wipe, disable and lock the phone.

Another idea would be to only allow a reset of the phone with your Apple ID and password. If Apple products failed to work after being stolen, they would not be stoled.
 

brookshanes

macrumors member
Jul 5, 2011
35
0
Midwest
probably money compensation under the table

The person probably got monetary compensation in addition to the iPod. No doubt if it took 6 weeks to get the messages turned off this customer has more anger than what an iPod can quash.
 
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