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iphone hacked, pictures altered and camera being accessed when phone is idle or sleeping

Hi there,




About 2 years ago, I inadvertently discovered someone had

hacked into my iphone or Apple ID (I assume) and altered images of my 9 month

old daughters face, very disturbing. Then over the next few months my iphone

was taking on a life of its own. To explain what was happening, it was like I

was fighting to take control of selecting buttons or swiping the screen (even

after having the screen replaced) and someone was on the other side trying to

do the complete opposite. The reality set in, when I took it to the apple store

and as I was explaining the situation to the Apple genius, and she observed the

iphone doing its own thing and commented that she "had never seen this

sort of thing before". She recommended I do a complete reset, change

passwords and it should stop. And so I did and for a while there, all seemed

fine. HOWEVER more recently (last 4-6 months) I have observed (and also read on

this forum) that my camera is being accessed when my phone is idle. For

instance, my iphone will be sitting next to me (black screen) and I will look

to pick it up and notice the green dot, indicating the camera is being

accessed. The green dot disappears about 1-2sec following this and I swipe from

the right-hand corner to see which app was accessing it and it states - CAMERA USED

RECENTLY. More concerning is I have adjusted my privacy settings so that ALL

apps do not have access to my camera or microphone. This situation has also

happened when I have simply been holding my iphone (no apps in use) and

suddenly the green dot appears and then quickly disappears. How or Who is accessing

my camera when ALL apps have camera and microphone disallowed, no Apps are open

on the iphone and my Apple ID password has been reset, together with many other

passwords and settings?

iPhone 11 Pro, iOS 15

Posted on Jun 23, 2022 8:29 PM

Reply
Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Posted on Jun 25, 2022 7:47 AM

Champion8802 wrote:

Thanks Mr Hoffman for responding, however I am militant with passwords etc. But how do you explain the camera being accessed when all passwords have been changed (including Apple ID, apps, email etc), the latest iOS downloaded and all privacy settings changed to eliminate camera and microphone access. Thanks again for taking the time


I’m not in a position to perform forensics nor perform a personalized security review in a forum text box.


That review would include a two-factor check, backups checks, password manager usage checks, a review of the Apple personalized security recommendations, the particular apps involved with the reported camera and microphone access, and other details and not the least of which would be some consideration of your specific risk and of the most likely threats. There’ll be other checks necessarily involving direct device access, too.


Read and follow the preciously-posted security and privacy link. If you’re specifically likely to be a target, or believe you are a target get direct help. (Differentiating those folks that have other issues or threats from those that have technical security threats from folks using advanced tooling is part of this whole process, and that too is difficult in a text box.)


And as per your original report, if this hasn’t been identified and resolved in two years and likely with previous discussions, it seems whatever is arising over that timeframe is unlikely to be resolved here today.

Similar questions

6 replies
Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Jun 25, 2022 7:47 AM in response to Champion8802

Champion8802 wrote:

Thanks Mr Hoffman for responding, however I am militant with passwords etc. But how do you explain the camera being accessed when all passwords have been changed (including Apple ID, apps, email etc), the latest iOS downloaded and all privacy settings changed to eliminate camera and microphone access. Thanks again for taking the time


I’m not in a position to perform forensics nor perform a personalized security review in a forum text box.


That review would include a two-factor check, backups checks, password manager usage checks, a review of the Apple personalized security recommendations, the particular apps involved with the reported camera and microphone access, and other details and not the least of which would be some consideration of your specific risk and of the most likely threats. There’ll be other checks necessarily involving direct device access, too.


Read and follow the preciously-posted security and privacy link. If you’re specifically likely to be a target, or believe you are a target get direct help. (Differentiating those folks that have other issues or threats from those that have technical security threats from folks using advanced tooling is part of this whole process, and that too is difficult in a text box.)


And as per your original report, if this hasn’t been identified and resolved in two years and likely with previous discussions, it seems whatever is arising over that timeframe is unlikely to be resolved here today.

Jun 23, 2022 8:41 PM in response to Champion8802

Usual cause of this is compromised passwords. Whether that’s re-used passwords, easily-guessed, or passwords otherwise exposed?


Apple ID accounts lacking two-factor can also be more easily exposed to credentials phishing.


Apple has available security recommendations in Settings > Passwords, too.


Here is some reading to help you learn more about security and privacy: https://help.apple.com/pdf/personal-safety/en_US/personal-safety-user-guide.pdf


One of the very few ways to indicate your data is valuable is with backups. Otherwise, you’re one corruption, one compromise, one mistake, one dunking, or one theft away from data loss. Backups are a key part of security, too.


Malware does exist for iPhone, though it tends to be rare and targeted. Compromised passwords, phishing, lack of two-factor authentication and related are more common issues for folks, however.


Jun 23, 2022 8:33 PM in response to Champion8802

By hack, if you mean remotely controlling your device, then...


Keep the iPhone updated to the latest iOS always and never Jailbreak. That's it.


iOS / iPadOS devices cannot be hacked or infected with Virus / Malware / Spyware if it is updated to the latest iOS/iPadOS unless you have intentionally downloaded spurious software or unauthorized apps directly from the internet and installed them on your device or/and have Jailbroken


It (Hacking) also depends on how careful are you in sharing sensitive and valuable information pertaining to your iPhone such as Passcode, Password, etc with your friends and family members.


Be careful when sharing the device's sensitive and valuable information with friends and family members.


Thumb Rules:

  1. Enable  Guided Access before handing over an iPhone to kids
  2. Don't share Apple IDs
  3. Don't Jailbreak
  4. Don't share sensitive information pertaining to your device and payment methods
  5. Beware of Phishing


Jun 24, 2022 11:13 PM in response to SravanKrA

I appreciate you taking the time to respond, but I’m a very basic user of the iPhone. Jail breaking is a foreign concept to me. I admit I downloaded Norton Anti-virus when my pictures got accessed and it added a VPN to my iPhone, which the apple genius told me to remove as they felt it might have been the cause of the phone “taking on a life of its own”. Also, as a “basic user” I don’t share passwords with family or friends.

The camera access issue which appears to be a very prevalent topic more recently is a real concern however.



iphone hacked, pictures altered and camera being accessed when phone is idle or sleeping

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