Weak Apple PRNG Threatens iOS Exploit Mitigations
Trailrunner7 writes "A revamped early random number generator in iOS 7 is weaker than its vulnerable predecessor and generates predictable outcomes. A researcher today at CanSecWest said an attacker could brute force the Early Random PRNG used by Apple in its mobile operating system to bypass a number of kernel exploit mitigations native to iOS. 'The Early Random PRNG in iOS 7 is surprisingly weak,' said Tarjei Mandt senior security researcher at Azimuth Security. 'The one in iOS 6 is better because this one is deterministic and trivial to brute force.' The Early Random PRNG is important to securing the mitigations used by the iOS kernel. 'All the mitigations deployed by the iOS kernel essentially depend on the robustness of the Early Random PRNG,' Mandt said. 'It must provide sufficient entropy and non-predictable output.'"
..on a smart phone like the iPhone. Use the gyros/accelerometers, make the user draw randomly on the screen, maybe use random info like wifi network names currently available, generate random info based on images on the phone, etc. etc. Plenty of data/means available to create the entropy needed.
Bad PRNGs have jumped the shark. For a company like Apple to have a supposedly secure PRNG in their products and for them not to have had a group of security Nazis identify all the PRNGs in their products and make sure they're all good and fix them where not, it unconscionable.
In my company we systematically did exactly that. It's standard practice these days.
I should use this sig to advertise my book ISBN-13 : 978-1501515132.
Just because there are nefarious things going on doesnt mean that people have stopped making mistakes, or that the two are somehow mutually exclusive.
Yes, you should still want proof that this is malicious or subversive.