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Monday, March 30, 2020

iOS 13.4 flaw may expose user data: How to avoid it - Tom's Guide

A bug in iOS 13.3.1 and later is preventing iPhone users from properly connecting to VPNs, VPN provider ProtonVPN says. However, there's a chance that this may occur only for specific Apple traffic and may be perfectly benign.

The problem seems to arise when an iPhone user connects to a VPN server while already connected to internet services and websites, as most iPhones normally would. 

Even after the VPN service is switched on, ProtonVPN says, some existing connections do not switch to using the VPN, but instead keep using their previous routes.

The risks to the user are that the still-alive connections will let third-party observers see to which IP addresses the user's traffic is going. The VPN connection would normally mask that. Data on any unencrypted connections will also still be visible to network "sniffers," although as ProtonVPN admits, that's rare nowadays.

"Those at highest risk because of this security flaw are people in countries where surveillance and civil rights abuses are common," ProtonVPN says in a blog posting.

How to avoid this issue

The fix for this is easy. ProtonVPN suggests that to avoid this issue, iPhone users should go into Airplane Mode to kill all existing connections, then switch on their VPN service, then leave Airplane Mode to resume connectivity.

We've asked Apple for comment on this issue and will update our story when we receive a reply.

Not a bug, but an Apple feature by design?

However, there's a chance that this is a feature, not a bug. The WireShark screenshot meant to illustrate this phenomenon in the ProtonVPN blog posting shows the issue affecting only traffic to and from Apple servers, which use the entire 17.0.0.0 IP address range.

A screen capture of WireShark showing non-VPN traffic with Apple servers from an iPhone using ProtonVPN.

(Image credit: ProtonVPN)

Will Strafach, a well-respected mobile-security expert and creator of the Guardian iOS privacy app, wondered on Twitter yesterday (March 26) whether this behavior might be connected to the Apple Push Notification Service (APNS). 

APNS is the Apple-specific protocol used for FaceTime and push notifications, and it does not behave the exactly the same way as regular internet traffic -- but it does use the Apple IP address range. It also appears that Apple goes out of its way to make sure that APNS traffic avoids going through VPNs and proxy services.

One person responding to Strafach's tweet cited an OpenVPN support FAQ that states: "Many Apple services such as Push Notifications and FaceTime are never routed through the VPN tunnel, as per Apple policy." 

Another Tweeter pointed to an Apple document that says, "You need a direct, unproxied connection to the APNS servers" to use push notifications or FaceTime.

Nope, still an issue, ProtonVPN says

ProtonVPN said in its blog posting that even though this issue does occur with APNS traffic, "the problem could impact any app or service, such as instant messaging applications or web beacons."

The ProtonVPN Twitter account also replied to Strafach's Twitter query: "We looked into this hypothesis at the time and determined A) This bug isn't specific to APNS (though that is the most common and easiest to reproduce) B) Notifications are delivered through the VPN tunnel, provided the APNS connection is established once the VPN tunnel is set up."

"There is an easy way to test this issue, which is to use the workaround proposed in our article," ProtonVPN added in a second tweet. "If you switch airplane mode on and then turn it back off -- thus killing the APNS long-lasting connection -- the re-established connection will be within the VPN tunnel."

We reponded to ProtonVPN's Twitter posts with a request for WireShark screenshots showing this issue happening with non-Apple servers. Again, we will update this story when we get a response.

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"avoid it" - Google News
March 28, 2020 at 03:33AM
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iOS 13.4 flaw may expose user data: How to avoid it - Tom's Guide
"avoid it" - Google News
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