23.3.17

Hackers: We Will Remotely Wipe iPhones Unless Apple Pays Ransom

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“I just want my money,”
one of the hackers said.A hacker or group of hackers is apparently trying to extort Apple over alleged access toa large cache of iCloudand other Apple email accounts.
The hackers, who identified themselves as 'Turkish Crime Family', demanded$75,000 in Bitcoin or Ethereum, another increasingly popular crypto-currency, or$100,000 worth of iTunes gift cards in exchange for deleting the alleged cache of data.
"I just want my money and thought this would be an interesting report that a lot of Apple customers would be interested in reading and hearing," one of the hackers told Motherboard.
The hackers provided screenshots of allegedemails between the group and members ofApple's security team. One also gave Motherboard access to an email account allegedly used to communicate with Apple.
"Are you willing to share a sample of the data set?"
an unnamedmember of Apple's security team wrote tothe hackers a week ago, according to one of the emails stored in the account. (According to the email headers, the return-path of the email is to an address with the @apple.com domain).
The hackers also uploaded a YouTube video of them allegedly logging into some of the stolen accounts. The hacker appears to access an elderly woman's iCloud account, which includes backed-up photos, and the ability to remotely wipe the device.
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"We firstly kindly request you to removethe video that you have uploaded on yourYouTube channel as it's seeking unwanted attention, second of allwe would like you to know that we do not reward cyber criminalsfor breaking the law," amessage allegedly from a member of Apple's security team reads. (Motherboard only saw a screenshotof this message, and not the original).
The alleged Apple team member then says archived communications with the hacker will be sentto the authorities.
Now, the hackers are threatening to reset a number of the iCloud accounts and remotely wipe victim's Apple devices on April 7, unless Apple pays the requested amount.According to one of the emails in the accessed account, thehackers claim to have access to over 300 million Apple email accounts, including those use @icloud and @me domains.
However, the hackers appear to be inconsistent in their story; one of the hackers then claimed they had 559 million accounts in all.
The hackers did not provide Motherboard with any of the supposedly stolen iCloud accounts to verify this claim,
the source


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