Security researchers have begun to crack open the
iPhone and its
underlying software components in the hope of being able to 'unlock' protections
on the device and run custom software.
Less than three days after
Apple's mobile
device went on
sale, researchers had taken the first steps towards unlocking the device.
Eric Tews, a cryptography student at the
Technical
University of Darmstadt, reported on the
Full
Disclosure mailing list that an analysis of the iPhone's disk image had
unearthed two internal passwords labelled 'root' and 'mobile'.
Researchers are not entirely sure what function the two passwords perform,
nor are they certain that the passwords are the same for every iPhone.
"In general the passwords appear to be part of the underlying OS X/Unix-based
system that makes the phone work," independent security researcher
Kevin
Finisterre told
vnunet.com.
Finisterre suggested that internal programs may use the passwords to gain
access to the iPhone components.
Developers could use these 'credentials' to communicate with the iPhone's
cellular radio, for instance, and receive feedback from the touch screen.
Security researcher
Tom
Ferris explained that the work being done on the Full Disclosure list is "
definitely the first step".
Ferris pointed out that there is still plenty of hacking to be done before
anybody other than Apple will be able to install programs on the iPhone. "They
do not have the keys to the kingdom yet," he told
vnunet.com.
Ferris noted that, while researchers have been able to open the iPhone
software and find such things as caller-ID information, they have yet to gain
the ability to write and execute code on the device, leaving the passwords of
little use at the moment.
"But once they are able to break out of that sandbox it is game over," said
Ferris.
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