A bizarre bug has been discovered in iOS that can cause an iPhone to crash when it attempts to join a Wi-Fi network with a particular name.
What’s the offending name? Well, I don’t want to put it in the text of this article in case some readers are curious enough to try it out for themselves.
So, here it is as an image:
Security researcher Carl Schou stumbled across the problem, and tweeted a vido of his iPhone getting in a mighty muddle when trying to connect to a Wi-Fi hotspot with that name.
“Neither rebooting nor changing SSID fixes it,” reported Schou in a tweet.
In all likelihood this is a simple goof caused by the way in which the iOS code is parsing the Wi-Fi hotspot’s name, causing a crash. But sometimes silly errors like this can turn into nasty attacks that can be exploited by malicious hackers – so we should always treat bugs like this with the respect they deserve, and fix them at the earliest opportunity.
I wouldn’t be at all surprised if there is a a minor software update released by Apple for iPhones and iPads in the coming days which fixes the problem, but in the meantime here is a way that you can fix afflicted iPhones today:
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Graham Cluley is an award-winning security blogger, researcher and public speaker. He has been working in the computer security industry since the early 1990s.
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