I wonder if Apple has enough log data to determine if anyone abused the FaceTime bug, and if so, if they'll inform the victims.
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Replying to @zackwhittaker @taviso
None of that data will indicate whether the bug was exploited, since the exploit merely involved calling someone.
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Replying to @RvLeshrac @zackwhittaker
It seems unbelievable that they would log that Metadata, but not "new participant in group chat". Simply compare participant to caller, or find calls where order of event timestamps "new participant" and "call accepted" don't match.
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Replying to @taviso @zackwhittaker
That just tells you the bug happened, not necessarily that someone was exploiting it.
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Replying to @RvLeshrac @zackwhittaker
If I understand correctly, you're saying that if someone was listening in on you, you only want to be notified if it can be proven the person was malicious? I think I would like to be notified whatever their intent.
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Replying to @taviso @zackwhittaker
They can do that, sure. The odds that someone gets assaulted because "you were spying on me", even though the data will be inconclusive, are pretty high, though, and that's gotta factor in to an Apple legal assessment.
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I wasn't suggesting Apple tell victims who the attacker was, I have never seen any data breach notification where providers do that.
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Replying to @taviso
In that case, the shorter answer is that if you received a group facetime during that period, it happened to you. Don't really need anything fancy.
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