Skip to content
  • Home
  • Cyber Map
  • About Us – Contact
  • Disclaimer
  • Terms and Rules
  • Privacy Policy
Cyber Web Spider Blog – News

Cyber Web Spider Blog – News

Globe Threat Map provides a real-time, interactive 3D visualization of global cyber threats. Monitor DDoS attacks, malware, and hacking attempts with geo-located arcs on a rotating globe. Stay informed with live logs and archive stats.

  • Home
  • Cyber Map
  • Cyber Security News
  • Security Week News
  • The Hacker News
  • How To?
  • Toggle search form
Apple SoCs Vulnerable to New BootROM Exploit

Apple SoCs Vulnerable to New BootROM Exploit

Posted on June 18, 2026 By CWS

A newly discovered BootROM vulnerability, named usbliter8, has been identified in Apple devices using A12, S4/S5, and A13 System-on-Chips (SoCs). This exploit leverages a hardware bug within the Synopsys DWC2 USB controller, coupled with a firmware configuration flaw, allowing a complete compromise of the application processor’s boot chain. Due to the unchangeable nature of BootROM code, no software patch can rectify this issue.

Understanding the Vulnerability

Researchers from Paradigm Shift attribute the vulnerability to the handling of consecutive USB Setup packets by the DWC2 USB controller. The controller can store up to three Setup packets in memory before it resets the Direct Memory Access (DMA) base address, kept in the DOEPDMA register, to its initial position, thus functioning as a ring buffer.

The core issue arises because, after each data write, the controller increases the DOEPDMA by the size of the data. However, the reset operation decreases it by a fixed 24 bytes. This discrepancy leads to a buffer underflow condition in 12-byte steps, enabling unauthorized writes to memory areas beyond the intended buffer.

Exploitation Differences Across SoCs

On the A12 and A13 models, the USB DART (Device Address Resolution Table) is set to bypass mode within SecureROM, leaving no IOMMU barrier to prevent DMA from altering arbitrary SRAM data. While A14 and later models correctly configure DART, making them immune to this exploit, earlier models remain vulnerable.

Exploiting the A12 and S4/S5 is relatively simple, as the DMA buffer is adjacent to the USB task’s stack on the heap. By corrupting a saved Link Register (LR), attackers can gain control of the Program Counter during a scheduler context switch. A compact ROP chain then redirects DMA writes into the boot trampoline, enabling execution of attacker shellcode with full privileges.

A13 SoC Exploitation Complexity

The A13 SoC introduces Pointer Authentication (PAC), complicating direct LR corruption. To circumvent this, researchers employed a multi-step method that involves controlled overwrites of DART heap metadata, neutralizing heap checksum protections, and preventing reboots during panic situations by overwriting a global panic counter.

Execution is rerouted using a gadget that loads a function pointer from memory controlled by the attacker, bypassing PAC due to a firmware oversight. Once EL1 code execution is achieved, the exploit injects a custom USB request handler, patches the USB serial number, and restores heap allocations to ensure device stability.

Affected Devices and Mitigation Strategies

The vulnerable SoCs include the Apple A12 in devices like the iPhone XS, XR, and iPad Pro 2018, as well as the A13 in the iPhone 11 series, and the S4/S5 in Apple Watch Series 4/5. Given the immutable nature of BootROM vulnerabilities, no software update can resolve this issue. Upgrading to A14 or newer hardware is the only effective countermeasure.

While Apple’s Secure Enclave Processor (SEP) provides an additional layer of security, usbliter8 potentially opens new avenues for indirect attacks on the Secure Enclave. Paradigm Shift coordinated with Apple Product Security before publicly disclosing their findings, and the complete proof-of-concept is accessible in their research repository.

Cyber Security News Tags:Apple, Apple Watch, BootROM, Exploit, iPad, iPhone, Paradigm Shift, Security, SOCs, Technology, Vulnerability

Post navigation

Previous Post: Outdated REDCap Servers Pose Cybersecurity Risks
Next Post: Microsoft Fondue.exe Exploited for Malware Deployment

Related Posts

Exim Vulnerability Enables Remote Code Execution Exim Vulnerability Enables Remote Code Execution Cyber Security News
Researchers Bypassed Web Application Firewall With JS Injection with Parameter Pollution Researchers Bypassed Web Application Firewall With JS Injection with Parameter Pollution Cyber Security News
NHS Investigating Oracle EBS Hack Following Cl0p Ransomware Group Claim NHS Investigating Oracle EBS Hack Following Cl0p Ransomware Group Claim Cyber Security News
Critical Axios Flaw Allows Node.js Server Crashes Critical Axios Flaw Allows Node.js Server Crashes Cyber Security News
Critical CRLF Vulnerability in Laravel Threatens Email Security Critical CRLF Vulnerability in Laravel Threatens Email Security Cyber Security News
Microsoft DNS Outage Disrupts Azure and Microsoft 365 Services Worldwide Microsoft DNS Outage Disrupts Azure and Microsoft 365 Services Worldwide Cyber Security News

Categories

  • Cyber Security News
  • How To?
  • Security Week News
  • The Hacker News

Recent Posts

  • F5 Fixes Critical NGINX Vulnerabilities Allowing Code Execution
  • Microsoft Fondue.exe Exploited for Malware Deployment
  • Apple SoCs Vulnerable to New BootROM Exploit
  • Outdated REDCap Servers Pose Cybersecurity Risks
  • INC Ransomware Dominates 2026 with Over 830 Attacks

Pages

  • About Us – Contact
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Rules

Archives

  • June 2026
  • May 2026
  • April 2026
  • March 2026
  • February 2026
  • January 2026
  • December 2025
  • November 2025
  • October 2025
  • September 2025
  • August 2025
  • July 2025
  • June 2025
  • May 2025

Recent Posts

  • F5 Fixes Critical NGINX Vulnerabilities Allowing Code Execution
  • Microsoft Fondue.exe Exploited for Malware Deployment
  • Apple SoCs Vulnerable to New BootROM Exploit
  • Outdated REDCap Servers Pose Cybersecurity Risks
  • INC Ransomware Dominates 2026 with Over 830 Attacks

Pages

  • About Us – Contact
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Rules

Categories

  • Cyber Security News
  • How To?
  • Security Week News
  • The Hacker News

Copyright © 2026 Cyber Web Spider Blog – News.

Powered by PressBook Masonry Dark