Nothing’s iMessage app was a security catastrophe, taken down in 24 hours

It turns out companies that stonewall the media’s security questions actually aren’t good at security. Last Tuesday, Nothing Chats—a chat app from Android manufacturer “Nothing”and upstart app company Sunbird—brazenly claimed to be able to hack into Apple’s iMessage protocol and give Android users blue bubbles. We immediately flagged Sunbird as a company that had been making empty promises for almost a year and seemed negligent about security. The app launched Friday anyway and was immediately ripped to shreds by the Internet for many security issues. It didn’t last 24 hours; Nothing pulled the app from the Play Store Saturday morning. The Sunbird app, which Nothing Chat is just a reskin of, has also been put “on pause.”

The initial sales pitch for this app—that it would log you into iMessage on Android if you handed over your Apple username and password—was a huge security red flag that meant Sunbird would need an ultra-secure infrastructure to avoid disaster. Instead, the app turned out to be about as unsecure as we expected. Here’s Nothing’s statement:

Nothing Chat's shut down post.

How bad are the security issues? Both 9to5Google and Text.com (which is owned by Automattic, the company behind WordPress) uncovered shockingly bad security practices. Not only was the app not end-to-end encrypted, as claimed numerous times by Nothing and Sunbird, but Sunbird actually logged and stored messages in plain text on both the error reporting software Sentry and in a Firebase store. Authentication tokens were sent over unencrypted HTTP so this token could be intercepted and used to read your messages.

Text.com released a proof-of-concept app that could fetch your supposedly end-to-end encrypted messages from Sunbird’s servers. Batuhan Içöz, a product engineer for Text.com, also released a tool that will delete some of your data from Sunbird’s servers. Içöz recommends that any Sunbird/Nothing Chat users change their Apple password now, revoke Sunbird’s session, and “assume your data is already compromised.”

9to5Google’s Dylan Roussel investigated the app and found that, in addition to all of the public text data, “All of the documents (images, videos, audios, pdfs, vCards…) sent through Nothing Chat AND Sunbird are public.”Roussel found 630,000 media files are currently stored by Sunbird, and apparently he could access some. Sunbird’s app suggested that users transfer vCards—virtual business cards full of contact data—and Roussel says the personal information of 2,300-plus users is accessible. Roussel calls the whole fiasco “probably the biggest ‘privacy nightmare’ I’ve seen by a phone manufacturer in years.”

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