Apple sued for lying about iPhone X screen size Watch Now Before the so-called Apple “Facepalm” bug hit the headlines, the mother of a 14-year-old boy from Arizona had been trying to warn the tech giant about the vulnerability for over a week. A FaceTime call made on 19 January by Michele Thompson’s son, as reported by sister site CNET , began the chain of events. The teenager added a friend to the group conversation and despite the fact that the friend had not yet picked up the phone, he was able to listen in to conversations taking place in the iPhone’s environment. Grant Thompson replicated the security flaw a number of times before reporting the vulnerability to his mother — who tried in vain to contact the iPhone and iPad maker. Michele first took to Twitter , warning that the “major security flaw” in Apple’s new iOS allowed her son to “listen in to your iPhone/iPad without your approval.” The Verge reports that the vulnerability can also be used to view live video feeds if the recipient hits right-side buttons or the volume tab to ignore an incoming call. See also: What’s driving Apple’s huge Services business? In addition,… Read full this story
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