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Apple awards hacker $100K for finding a Sign In With Apple vulnerability

A vulnerability inside Sign In With Apple could have potentially allowed hackers to take over your linked, third-party accounts. Discovered by India-based security researcher Bhavuk Jain in April, Apple has since patched the loophole, and in recognition of the discovery, awarded Jain a bug bounty of $100,000.

Sign-in platforms, including the one by Apple, protect user identity by exchanging a token with the third-party service instead of providing a set of private credentials. This token is produced every time you click, in Apple’s case, the Sign-In With Apple button, and lets the third party authenticate you by running it through Apple’s database.

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The bug that Bhavuk came across affected how Apple’s authentication service confirmed who was requesting that token in a session. While Sign-In With Apple needed a valid Apple account to work, it wasn’t verifying whether that same account was the one requesting a token. Therefore, irrespective of the device’s linked Apple account, Bhavuk was able to retrieve a token for any Apple ID and use that to illicitly take over its connected, third-party account.

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Even though the victim’s Apple account wasn’t compromised, since that’s never directly revealed in the process, this loophole could have enabled intruders to log into any of the account’s Sign-In With Apple apps. It’s also worth noting that the bug would have proved detrimental only when the third-party service itself didn’t have any additional privacy protections of its own.

“The impact of this vulnerability was quite critical as it could have allowed full account takeover. A lot of developers have integrated Sign in with Apple since it is mandatory for applications that support other social logins. To name a few that use Sign in with Apple – Dropbox, Spotify, Airbnb, Giphy (Now acquired by Facebook). These applications were not tested but could have been vulnerable to a full account takeover if there weren’t any other security measures in place while verifying a user,” wrote Bhavuk in a blog post.

Apple told Bhavuk, after investigating its internal logs, that “there was no misuse or account compromise due to this vulnerability.”

Launched about a year ago, Apple has centered its sign-in service around the idea of a more private and secure login experience. It has been adopted by a number of developers and companies including Airbnb, Dropbox, Adobe, TikTok, and more. It’s unclear for how long this vulnerability was left in the open and how far-reaching its effects would be on early adopters’ trust in the sign-in service. We’ve reached out to Apple regarding the same and we’ll update the story when we hear back.

Shubham Agarwal
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Shubham Agarwal is a freelance technology journalist from Ahmedabad, India. His work has previously appeared in Firstpost…
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