• RealM
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    621 year ago

    Which humans are you blaming exactly?

    I don’t think it’s fair to blame the users. They toggle bluetooth off and think it’s off. How are they supposed to know “Bluetooth Off” means “Only some amount of Bluetooth is off”?
    And I don’t think designing a convincing phishing device is that much of a leap in logic. Bluetooth is off, so maybe the notification is legit from apple and needs authority for a connection?

    If you blame the designers who left a backdoor in the bluetooth, then yea that’s fair.

    • @EyesEyesBaby
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      1 year ago

      How are they supposed to know “Bluetooth Off” means “Only some amount of Bluetooth is off”?

      When bluetooth is on, the icon is blue. When connecting is off, the icon is white. When bluetooth is fully off, the icon is grey. The same goes for wifi. It even gives you a textual confirmation.

      That’s not new.

      • RealM
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        91 year ago

        Thanks, I never used an Apple Product, so I didn’t have the contextual infromation!
        To me it sounded like a binary state (on/off), as I know it from most phones I’ve seen.

        • lemmyvore
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          151 year ago

          I still think it’s unfair to blame the user. Apple design is not as consistent or as intuitive as touted. Their UI still has lots of hidden features, inconsistent behavior and strange decisions.

          • @[email protected]
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            21 year ago

            Just had to use my wife’s iphone and felt like a moron trying to navigate it.

            I don’t know the gestures, the last iOS device I supported still had that center home button.

        • @[email protected]
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          21 year ago

          It wasn’t always like this. It started somewhere around the iPhone X I think. It used to actually turn off wifi/bt in the menu.

          • @[email protected]
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            11 year ago

            Before the iOS overhaul, you went Settings>Bluetooth>Toggle to turn off BT. That still works like it did before. But what most people do now is just swipe from the top-right and tap the shortcut.

            • @[email protected]
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              11 year ago

              Yea the control center used to turn them off. Apple changed it to “disconnect until tomorrow” in iOS 11. So iOS 7-10 it functioned fine.

      • @chrisphero
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        21 year ago

        Perhaps, they added, Apple could add a warning message when using the Control Panel toggles that alerts the user that tapping on its Bluetooth icon doesn’t completely shut off Bluetooth and their iPhone can still interact with proximity-activated beacons, such as Bochs’ contraption. So they are saying “off” isn’t really off if you do it in the control center, you have so go into settings to completely turn it off.

        I don’t know if it turns itself black on (blue) when something is trying to connect.

    • @chrisphero
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      91 year ago

      I was indeed blaming the end users. Yes, the bluetooth off thing on apple devices is super annoying and I don’t know why they still force it…

      Bluetooth is off, so maybe the notification is legit from apple and needs authority for a connection? The thing is, why would you connect to an Apple TV when you are not at home? Or share your password with another device when nobody asked you in person (e.g. WiFi password)?

      Form my understanding, this falls into the same category as phishing SMS or mails. You as a user need to know if this is legit or not.

      The target audience for this are not people here on lemmy… it’s our parents, grandparents and more in generally people who are not tach savvy… and/or just don’t care.

      This is why we need to make people aware of this and teach them how to respond, basically not to click on everything you see. I’m still doing this in my family and I’m very proud of my 80 year old grandma, that dodged a few very convincing scams. :)

      And haha, I never thought of backdoors, but yes, they are also produced by humans.