- iPhones have been mysteriously rebooting while in police custody
- A report has confirmed that it’s a security feature in iOS 18.1
- It’s to protect your data from thieves, hackers, and others
If your iPhone gets lost or stolen, or otherwise ends up in the wrong hands, the last thing you want is for someone to access all your private data, which might include photos, bank details, account passwords and other sensitive information – and a new feature in iOS 18.1 appears to be designed to keep your data safe.
If your iPhone has gone unused for around 96 hours (or four days) since it was last unlocked, it will automatically reboot, providing it’s running iOS 18.1 or later.
What’s the purpose of this? Well, when an iPhone is rebooted, it moves from what’s called After First Unlock (AFU) mode to a Before First Unlock (BFU) status. An iPhone running in BFU mode is more secure than one in AFU, making it much harder to crack or break into. The idea seems to be that this will thwart thieves who have your device and are waiting until they’re able to get an unlocking device that will enable them to access your private data.
Apple indeed added a feature called “inactivity reboot” in iOS 18.1. This is implemented in keybagd and the AppleSEPKeyStore kernel extension. It seems to have nothing to do with phone/wireless network state. Keystore is used when unlocking the device.https://t.co/ONZuU9zVt2 https://t.co/4ORUqR6P6N pic.twitter.com/O3jijuqpN0November 8, 2024
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