1/4/2024 0 Comments 100 rogues ios 11![]() We were able to delete rogue messages them one by one, as well as to escape out to the main Messages to delete entire conversations in one go. We can’t be sure that Apple set out to fix this flaw, but it looks as though the Messages app is now automatically cutting off long messages to limit the number of invisible Unicode control characters that can be flung at the app.Īs far as we can see – and this is entirely down to basic deduction, not the result of any actual analysis, so don’t hold us to this! – these truncated “messages of death” can fairly easily be deleted, which wasn’t the case when we tried this before the update. Better after the update?Īnyway, after updating to iOS 11.4, we tried sending rogue messages again, and things were nowhere near as bad as before. The app would typically freeze solid, or crash before we could fix things, whereupon restarting the app just jumped us straight back to where it had been when it crashed, and so the cycle continued. Unfortunately, we couldn’t open individual messages from the message screen to invoke the “delete message menu”, either. We couldn’t easily get back from the message screen, where the app was trying desperately to process the rogue messages, to the main list of conversations, where we could have deleted all the rogues in one go. Indeed, earlier this month, we deliberately sent several rogue “messages of death” to the iOS Messages app, and we quickly ended up in trouble. ![]() However, it seems that the text rendering code in Apple’s products was clearly never designed to switch left/right/left/right thousands of times in a row for no good reason at all other than to cause mischief. ![]() So Arabic and Hebrew routinely need to typeset text from the right, then to jump ahead and set numerals backwards from the left towards the text just printed out, then to switch back again, skipping over the numerals and again laying out the text from right to left. Those languages write their text from right to left, but commonly write numbers left to right using Indian numerals, just as we do in English. The offending characters are formally known as LEFT-TO-RIGHT MARK and RIGHT-TO-LEFT MARK – they don’t take up any space on the screen, but they are commonly needed when rendering text in languages such as Arabic and Hebrew. These were publicly circulating text messages that looked as though they were just one line long, but actually contained thousands of Unicode control characters to change text direction. Remember the WhatsApp “ message of death” and the iMessage “black dot” problem from the start of May 2018? Well, even without Apple’s official security advisory email, we think we’ve found a more-than-good-enough reason.
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