Vulnerabilities

Apple Updates Advisories as Security Firm Discloses New Class of Vulnerabilities

Apple has updated its security advisories to add new iOS and macOS vulnerabilities, including ones belonging to a new class of bugs.

Apple patches vulnerabilities

Apple on Monday updated several of its recent security advisories to add new iOS and macOS vulnerabilities, including ones belonging to a new class of bugs.

The iOS 16.3 and macOS Ventura 13.2 advisories, originally released on January 23, have been updated to add three vulnerabilities. One of them is CVE-2023-23520, a race condition affecting the crash reporter component, which can allow an attacker to read arbitrary files as root. 

The other two security holes impact the ‘foundation’ component in Apple’s operating systems and they can allow an attacker to “execute arbitrary code out of its sandbox or with certain elevated privileges”, according to the tech giant.

These vulnerabilities, tracked as CVE-2023-23530 and CVE-2023-23531, were reported to Apple by extended detection and response (XDR) company Trellix.

Trellix published a blog post on Tuesday to describe these flaws, which the firm says are part of a new class of bugs that can allow attackers to bypass code signing on macOS and iOS systems. 

Trellix’s analysis builds on previous research and exploits that were actually used in the wild to target Apple customers. The company says CVE-2023-23530 and CVE-2023-23531 have opened a “huge range of potential vulnerabilities” that its researchers are currently investigating. 

The bugs are related to research conducted by an iOS security researcher known as CodeColorist in 2019 and 2020. The techniques he described at the time appear to have inspired threat actors, which used it in 2021 to deliver Pegasus spyware to iPhones. The exploit used in these attacks was dubbed ForcedEntry and it was addressed by Apple in September 2021.   

Apple has taken steps to prevent exploitation, but Trellix researchers discovered that the vendor’s mitigations could be bypassed.

Advertisement. Scroll to continue reading.

An attacker who has access to the targeted system can exploit these vulnerabilities to defeat process isolation on iOS and macOS. Depending on the targeted process’s role and permissions, a hacker could gain access to sensitive information (calendar, address book, photos), install arbitrary applications, or spy on users.  

In addition to the January iOS and macOS advisories, Apple updated its February advisories on Monday to add a denial-of-service (DoS) vulnerability reported by a Google researcher. 

Related: Apple Patches Actively Exploited WebKit Zero-Day Vulnerability 

Related: Apple Patches Zero-Day Vulnerability Exploited Against iPhones

Related: Apple Fixes Exploited Zero-Day With iOS 16.1 Patch

Related Content

Vulnerabilities

Apple has released iOS 17.4.1 and macOS Sonoma 14.4.1 with patches for an arbitrary code execution vulnerability.

Data Protection

Researchers detail GoFetch, a new side-channel attack impacting Apple CPUs that could allow an attacker to obtain secret keys.

Vulnerabilities

High-severity vulnerability in Apple Shortcuts could lead to sensitive information leak without user’s knowledge.

Data Protection

Apple unveils PQ3, a new post-quantum cryptographic protocol for iMessage designed to protect communications against quantum computing attacks.

Vulnerabilities

Apple’s latest Magic Keyboard firmware addresses a recently disclosed Bluetooth keyboard injection vulnerability.

Mobile & Wireless

Chinese state-backed experts have found a way to identify people who use Apple's encrypted AirDrop messaging service, according to the Beijing municipal government.

Mobile & Wireless

Apple is testing a new security feature that should limit what iPhone thieves can do with a stolen phone, even if they have the...

Mobile & Wireless

Cupertino’s flagship mobile OS vulnerable to arbitrary code execution and data exposure security vulnerabilities.

Copyright © 2024 SecurityWeek ®, a Wired Business Media Publication. All Rights Reserved.

Exit mobile version