Julianne Pepitone, CNNMoney
NEW YORK (CNNMoney) – The recent hacking of Mat Honan was doubly
shocking: he’s a writer for tech Bible Wired, and hackers were able to
crack his accounts with non-technical ease.
Here’s the scariest part: Anyone with both an Amazon account and an Apple ID is potentially vulnerable to the same attack.
The two companies say they’re working to close the security gaps
exposed by Honan’s hack, but they were tight-lipped on Tuesday about the
details of what changes they’re making.
Honan’s harrowing tale, which he chronicled in a detailed story for
Wired late Monday, explains how a Friday-night hack quickly snowballed
and took down many of his digital accounts: Amazon, Apple iCloud, Gmail
and Twitter, plus the data on his three Apple devices.
At the heart of his story is a dangerous blind spot between the
identity verification systems used by Amazon and Apple, two of the tech
industry’s most popular vendors.
Like many people, Honan has a variety of email addresses. Several of
them can be easily tracked down by anyone hunting around online. The
hacker who went after Honan found his @me.com address — a tip-off that
Honan had an AppleID account.
The attacker then used Amazon’s systems to break into Apple’s.
The trick worked like this: Call Amazon and tell them you want to add
a credit card number to your account. The company will ask for your
name, billing address, and an associated email address. That’s it.
(Wired tested the method using a fake credit card number. It worked —
twice.)
Then hang up, call back, and tell the next Amazon representative that
you’ve lost access to your account. They’ll ask for your name, billing
address, and a credit card associated with the account — like the one
you added just moments earlier. With that information, Amazon will allow
you to add a new email address to the account.
Go to Amazon’s website and send a password reset to the new email
address. Now you’ve got access to your target’s Amazon account and can
see all the credit cards on file for the account.
Amazon masks most of the credit card numbers, displaying only the last four digits.
But here’s the catch: That’s enough to go and game Apple’s systems.
“The very four digits that Amazon considers unimportant enough to
display in the clear on the Web are precisely the same ones that Apple
considers secure enough to perform identity verification,” Honan wrote
in his Wired account.
The hacker — who later contacted Honan and agreed to share details
about the technique if he didn’t press charges — called Apple tech
support and requested a password reset on Honan’s @me.com email account.
The hacker couldn’t answer any of the account’s security questions, but
Apple offers another option.
“It turns out, a billing address and the last four digits of a credit
card number are the only two pieces of information anyone needs to get
into your iCloud account,” Honan wrote. “Once supplied, Apple will issue
a temporary password, and that password grants access to iCloud.”
Apple told CNNMoney in an emailed statement that “we found that our own internal policies were not followed completely.”
The company would not comment further on what policies went awry. As
far as Honan could determine, using credit card numbers to verify
identity is a standard method.
“Apple tech support confirmed to me twice over the weekend that all
you need to access someone’s AppleID is the associated e-mail address, a
credit card number, the billing address, and the last four digits of a
credit card on file,” he wrote. “I was very clear about this.”
Amazon says it is working to plug holes on its end: “We have
investigated the reported exploit, and can confirm that the exploit has
been closed as of yesterday afternoon,” the company told CNNMoney on
Tuesday.
But what, exactly, has changed? Amazon declined to comment or answer further questions.
A separate Wired article posted Tuesday said Amazon’s customer
service representatives will no longer change account settings like
credit cards or email addresses by phone.
That change came too late for Honan, though. Once the hacker had
access to Honan’s Apple account, the damage was swift and devastating.
He used Apple’s remote wipe tool to delete all the data on Honan’s phone
— then did the same to his iPad and MacBook. The hacker also nuked
Honan’s Google account and began posting racist and homophobic messages
on his Twitter page.
In his article, Honan seemed to cast little blame on the hackers;
instead he said it was his fault for not backing up his data, and for
“daisy-chaining” his various accounts together.
Honan thinks the biggest culprits are Apple and Amazon, for making
systems that can so easily be gamed — especially when they’re targeted
together.
That’s the part that has the tech industry spooked. Millions of
people have accounts with both Amazon and Apple, which means Honan isn’t
the first victim of this attack method.
“You hear about it if it’s a celeb or a writer, because they have the
medium to tell their story,” one commenter wrote in response to a
Forbes article about the hacking. “Something similar happened to one of
the members of my Rotary Club. Why haven’t you heard about it? Because
he’s a retired dentist living 8 miles in from the south coast of
England.”
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