If you want to know what makes the iPhone tick, thank the hackers who’ve been working tirelessly to discover its secrets. DVD Jon has already posted a workaround to the AT&T activation, which means the device can work – just not as a phone. But that’s just the tip of the iceberg. Far more important are two more discoveries by others, the root password for the phone and the password for the mobile user account. The iPhone root password is “Alpine,” and the mobile user account is “Dottie.” And, in dissecting the phone, hackers have laid bare the CPU, which is an ARM architecture, unlike previous systems used by Apple. As hackers of all stripes discover more about the iPhone, and the handset becomes more commonplace, it’s very likely that the number of viruses written to affect it will grow. And as phone become more sophisticated and like mini computers – like the iPhone – they’re more likely to be hit, rather than the relatively crude older cell phones. In other words, the phone’s popularity could become its problem. “It is why there are so many more viruses targeting Windows, after all, than the Mac,” Mark Sunner, chief security analyst at MessageLabs, told E-Commerce Times. “It is quite telling that now that the iPod generation has come into the workforce, the number of threats against Mac OS X is increasing.” Still, for now analysts seem to agree the the iPhone is more secure than most smartphones on the market. However, if you own one, expect the malware to appear, and probably sooner, rather than later.
Tag Archive: Dottie
What The iPhone Hackers Have Found
- By: Digital Trends Staff •
- Published: July 10, 2007 •
- Comments: Comments
Page 1 of 11
Popular Tags
Recent Comments
By: Grandpa3 • Read Comment
AMOLED is a kind of LCD... and Behold2 HAS high resolution mode for Youtube....
By: DLT • Read Comment
Everyones moving onto ps3 since the live bans...
By: Internet Explorer 9 | Learning WebGL • Read Comment
[...] claim, but it’s not clear to me how much can be gained this way. At the coding level, it sounds like what they’ve done is improve the underlying graphics library code by switching from GDI (or [...]...
