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Apple fixes iPhone bug that allowed people to eavesdrop on FaceTime calls

Click to play video: 'iPhone users test FaceTime bug that allows callers to eavesdrop'
iPhone users test FaceTime bug that allows callers to eavesdrop
WATCH: iPhone users test FaceTime bug that allows callers to eavesdrop – Jan 29, 2019

SAN FRANCISCO — Apple has released an iPhone update to fix a software flaw that allowed people to eavesdrop on others while using FaceTime.

The bug enabled interlopers to turn an iPhone into a live microphone while using Group FaceTime. Callers were able to activate another person’s microphone remotely even before the person has accepted or rejected the call.

READ MORE: If you FaceTime a friend, you could hear them even before they take the call. Apple is fixing this

Apple turned off the group-chat feature last week, after a 14-year-old boy in Tucson, Arizona, discovered the flaw. The teenager, Grant Thompson, and his mother said they unsuccessfully tried to contact the company about the problem for more than a week. Apple has been criticized for the delay in responding and has promised to improve procedures.

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WATCH: How a 14-year-old teenager discovered Apple’s FaceTime bug

Click to play video: 'How a 14-year-old teenager discovered Apple’s FaceTime bug'
How a 14-year-old teenager discovered Apple’s FaceTime bug

The FaceTime repair is included in the latest version of Apple’s iOS 12 system, which became available to install Thursday.

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Although the FaceTime bug has now been addressed, its emergence is particularly embarrassing for Apple. The bug exposed Apple customers to potential surveillance at a time that CEO Tim Cook has been repeatedly declaring that personal privacy is a “fundamental human right.”

Cook also has publicly skewered Facebook and Google, two companies that collect personal information to sell advertising, for not doing enough to protect people’s privacy.

READ MORE: New York officials to investigate Apple FaceTime privacy bug

Apple credited Thompson for discovering the FaceTime bug as part of its software update, nearly a week after thanking him for reporting the bug in the first place.

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As often occurs when people flag software flaws, Thompson will be rewarded for his sleuthing. Apple plans to contribute to Thompson’s college fund in addition to paying a bounty to him and his family for reporting the bug. The company, which has $245 billion in cash, isn’t disclosing the amounts.

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