How Apple’s ‘Inactivity Reboot’ Works on an iPhone
Last week, safety researcher Jiska Classen revealed that Apple had added a brand new characteristic known as ‘Inactivity Reboot’ that may trigger an unattended iPhone to reboot after a sure interval. The researcher has now revealed that the characteristic is activated after three days, together with an indication of the way it works.
See the newest iOS inactivity reboot in motion!
iOS 18 comes with improved anti-theft measures. Three days w/o unlock, the iPhone will reboot, stopping thieves from getting your information. (1/4) pic.twitter.com/H24Tfo1cSr
— Jiska (@naehrdine) November 13, 2024
In a video posted on X (previously Twitter), the researcher confirmed an iPhone 14 Pro mannequin operating on iOS 18.1, which rebooted when it was not unlocked inside a 72-hour interval. The safety characteristic is designed to restrict unauthorised entry to a smartphone, when it’s not in lively use.
When an iPhone is rebooted, it enters a state known as ‘Before First Unlock’ (BFU) — that is when the encryption keys used to guard person information are safely stored on the handset’s chipset, in a safe subsystem known as the Secure Enclave.
It is rather more troublesome for somebody to realize unauthorised entry to the smartphone within the BFU state, in comparison with ‘After First Unlock’ (AFU), which because the title suggests, is when the cellphone has been unlocked, and biometric authentication (Face ID or Touch ID) is enabled.
However, the researcher warns that three days (within the AFU state) is sufficient time for legislation enforcement to get entry to person information, particularly when utilizing skilled instruments or consultants. However, it’d stop thieves from having access to an iPhone utilizing out-of-date instruments.
Users may allow Stolen Data Protection — a characteristic launched with iOS 17.3 — that prompts the usage of biometric authentication to alter vital settings on an iPhone. This characteristic is disabled by default, because it provides extra friction to the method of modifying some settings, however customers will reportedly be prompted to show it on when organising their iPhone with the upcoming iOS 18.2 replace.