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Privacy Security Apple

Apple Brings Its Hardware Microphone Disconnect Feature To iPads (techcrunch.com) 26

Apple has brought its hardware microphone disconnect security feature to its latest iPads. From a report: The microphone disconnect security feature aims to make it far more difficult for hackers to use malware or a malicious app to eavesdrop on a device's surroundings. The feature was first introduced to Macs by way of Apple's T2 security chip last year. The security chip ensured that the microphone was physically disconnected from the device when the user shuts their MacBook lid. The idea goes that physically cutting off the microphone from the device prevents malware -- even with the highest level of âoerootâ device permissions -- from listening in to nearby conversations. Apple confirmed in a support guide that its newest iPads have the same feature. Any certified "Made for iPad" case that's attached and closed will trigger the hardware disconnect.
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Apple Brings Its Hardware Microphone Disconnect Feature To iPads

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  • If it is software-controllable, at all, we already know it is irrelevant if it is "hardware" disconnectable, and merely security theater:

    Anyone remember when it was reported that this was circumvented in (web)cams in laptops, by the malware altering the firmware?
    Doing it in plain old software should be trivial by comparison.
    (Not that I trust the OS or chips in there much anyway.)

    If it's not a physical switch, that physically cuts the lines, it should be illegal to advertise it as a "hardware disconnect". Th

    • ...this disconnect is implemented in hardware alone. The disconnect prevents any software—even with root or kernel privileges in macOS, and even the software on the T2 chip—from engaging the microphone when the lid is closed.

      https://support.apple.com/guid... [apple.com]

      • All Mac portables with the Apple T2 Security Chip feature a hardware disconnect that ensures the microphone is disabled whenever the lid is closed

        aka, SOFTWARE tells the hardware to this, the same software that tells your screen to turn off when the lid is closed. OP's comment still stands, and until there is a physical switch that must be physically moved, its still a software-controlled.

        Its like console DRM that checks the physical (aka hardware) cd for certain code that cd-writers can't reproduce. Sure, it's a hardware check, but the check is done by software which can be modified to say "Yep, uh huh, it's there all right...."

  • The feature was first introduced to Macs by way of Apple's T2 security chip last year. The security chip ensured that the microphone was physically disconnected from the device when the user shuts their MacBook lid.

    No, a chip isnt doing that. A chip is at most disallowing the pins to be read. It cannot "physically disconnect" the device like a rocker switch would.

    • Exactly this. At best there's an 'analog switch' [wikipedia.org] integrated into the IC, but that does not 'physically disconnect' anything; if you can change the state of a bit in a register to turn it back on, then there's nothing 'physical' about it.
      Now, the question is: is Apple intentionally blowing smoke up our arses about this, or is the news story just worded poorly?
      • by wagnerer ( 53943 )
        Reading the tech notes it sounds like a magnetic switch. It says the feature is only on devices with the T2 chip, not that it's run by the chip. Even says the T2 chip can't bypass it. MFi certified covers all have magnets at key points. So basically a relay to the mic for an external magnet is my guess how they implemented it.
  • Switch... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by SirAstral ( 1349985 ) on Friday April 03, 2020 @05:46PM (#59905890)

    Just give me a damn fucking physical switch that I can turn on or off myself. No gimmick shit like this... just because I open my lid does not mean I want the mic on.

    The technology around us is built to spy on us constantly, it has gone too far already.

    • Just give me a damn fucking physical switch

      No thanks. It's bad enough trying to micromanage hardware for a practically non-existent risk as it is.

    • by Jeremi ( 14640 )

      Just give me a damn fucking physical switch that I can turn on or off myself.

      Sounds like a refrigerator magnet might do the trick for you.

    • Just... Don't buy it if you don't like it.

    • I wholeheartedly agree. Please give me a hardware disconnect physical switch for wifi & bluetooth, the mic, and a physical shutter/cover for the webcam if you must make me have one. Apple would be horrified at having that much fru-fru and switches on the outside, but it'd be perfect on a Thinkpad. At least they had wifi & bluetooth hardware switches and many of the nicer older ones didn't have webcams, either. I still have several.
  • Is Apple feeling the heat of competition on the privacy front? Good! Because as tinfoil-hat-wearing Tor/Whonix/Monero/GPG user, I'm drooling over the PinePhone [pine64.org]
    • Not just the PinePhone, but the Pinebook Pro has some privacy switches. Not physical, which in some ways is preferable. They work on the keyboard controller.

      Long live privacy!
  • ...even if the microphone was physically disconnected, the speaker can potentially be used as an eavesdropping device. You'd have to physically disconnect that as well. (https://nakedsecurity.sophos.com/2016/11/24/how-your-speakers-could-be-turned-into-eavesdropping-microphones/)

    (Also, *is* there a true hardware disconnection of the microphone? Is the hardware disconnect created by a relay that is under software control? This wasn't clear from the summary).

    • by tlhIngan ( 30335 ) <slashdot.worf@net> on Friday April 03, 2020 @07:30PM (#59906234)

      ...even if the microphone was physically disconnected, the speaker can potentially be used as an eavesdropping device. You'd have to physically disconnect that as well. (https://nakedsecurity.sophos.com/2016/11/24/how-your-speakers-could-be-turned-into-eavesdropping-microphones/)

      (Also, *is* there a true hardware disconnection of the microphone? Is the hardware disconnect created by a relay that is under software control? This wasn't clear from the summary).

      The speaker thing only works if it was able to be reversed in the jack as an input. Since the speaker on the iPad is connected to an audio amplifier and some switches that can't be used to redirect as an input, it won't work.

      The story isn't fake - some audio output jacks can act as audio input jacks (they are marked as line outs, but are really software controlled line out/line in).

      However, in this story, there's a hardware sensor that detects some change of physical state - lid closed, or tablet covered. That sends a signal to the T2 chip. That chip then internally disconnects the microphone from the audio circuits.

      It likely isn't firmware controllable (the hardware signal controls the switching transistor directly), requiring a hardware bypass. However, firmware can query its status as well as being software controllable too - so either hardware OR software (or both) can disable the microphone. Short of a hardware mod, you can't enable the microphone if the hardware says it should be disconnected. Or a silicon error.

  • whine (Score:3, Funny)

    by presearch ( 214913 ) on Friday April 03, 2020 @07:06PM (#59906190)

    Apple does something reasonable, mentions it in passing.
    No other manufacturer is doing it.
    It's Apple, so:
    Why do it like that?
    It's not free!
    There are conditions!!
    I can just make my own for a nickel!!
    Walled garden!!!!
    fanbois are suckers!!!!!
    I want something else!!!!!!!!

    • Apple does something reasonable

      No, Apple claims to do something reasonable but, instead of making it a simple hardware circuit like most other people would do they decide to use a firmware-programmable chip to do it raising equally reasonable questions about whether their definition of "hardware" is consistent with most other people's definitions of hardware.

      • by Halo1 ( 136547 )

        No, Apple claims to do something reasonable but, instead of making it a simple hardware circuit like most other people would do they decide to use a firmware-programmable chip to do it

        They don't [apple.com]: this disconnect is implemented in hardware alone. The disconnect prevents any software -- even with root or kernel privileges in macOS, and even the software on the T2 chip -- from engaging the microphone when the lid is closed.

        The T2 chip mention refers to the fact that this hardware disconnect feature is only implemented on laptops that also happen to have a T2 chip.

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