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Apple Inc has issued an emergency software patch in its Messages app to block a no-click spyware that could infect iPhones and iPads.

According to the company, the security update was issued after it was determined that the flaw could be exploited if a user received a maliciously-crafted PDF file.

The flaw was disclosed by University of Toronto's cyber-research unit Citizen Lab.

According to the security researchers, Israel-based NSO Group used the flaw to exploit and infect the latest devices with spyware.

With the flaw, a hacker using NSO's Pegasus malware gained access to Saudi activist's iPhone.

The flaw allows hackers to access Apple devices through the iMessage service even if users do not click on a link or file, known as a zero-click exploit.

The issue could affect all of Apple's devices, including iPhones, Macs and Apple Watches.

Apple's iMessage is considered to be one of the most secure messaging apps.

The tech giant has issued the update on the iPhone, iPad, Mac and Apple Watch through iOS 14.8, iPadOS 14.8, macOS 11.6 and watchOS 7.6.2 software updates.

Citizen Lab researchers said they had found evidence of zero-click spyware earlier too but the latest was the first time where they could capture the exploit to find out how it works.

John Scott-Railton, senior researcher at Citizen Lab, said: "What this highlights is that chat apps are the soft underbelly of device security.

"They are ubiquitous, which makes them really attractive, so they are an increasingly common target for attackers. They need to be a major priority for security."

© DPA 2021

Foto: Arne Müseler.www.arne-mueseler.com.hallo@arne-mueseler.com

Coronavirus hospitalisations in Australia's biggest cities are on the rise as the nation edges towards 70 per cent first-dose vaccination coverage.

Sydney's major outbreak continues to claim lives and cause serious illness with 1253 patients in NSW hospitals including 231 requiring intensive care.

The overwhelmingly majority are not fully vaccinated.

There are 158 people hospitalised in Victoria, including 45 in ICU, as the virus spreads in Melbourne.

Just one patient is fully vaccinated.

Australia is expected to pass 70 per cent first dose vaccination coverage for people aged 16 and above by the end of this week.

More than 43 per cent of over-16's have full protection with Labor leader Anthony Albanese blaming the Morrison government's slow rollout for lockdowns.

"It always was a race. Now there are real consequences of us having run last in that race," he told reporters in Sydney.

"Consequences for our health but also consequences for our economy."

Health Minister Greg Hunt said fewer than 400,000 people needed to come forward for a jab this week to propel the nation past 70 per cent first-dose immunisation.

"That's an incredibly important milestone," he said.

In NSW, there were 1127 new cases, the state's lowest rise in almost two weeks but health authorities believe it's too early to predict a downward trend.

The two latest deaths took the state's toll for this outbreak to 186.

Victoria reported 445 new cases and two deaths, bringing its toll from the current outbreak to six.

The ACT's lockdown has been extended for another four weeks until at least mid-October after the ACT recorded another 22 cases.

Plans for returning Australians to quarantine in homes continue to be advanced.

Jane Halton, who is reviewing isolation arrangements for a second time, believes home quarantine will be viable once the nation hits 80 per cent double-dose vaccination coverage.

"I'm hoping that we can have systems up and running certainly in test arrangements well before Christmas," she told ABC radio.

"That's the carrot. If we hit that 80 per cent double-vaccinated point then we should be able to have these arrangements up and running."

Not all people arriving in the country will be able to access home quarantine, which will save travellers thousands on hotel bills and costs from other facilities.

South Australia is trialling a home system using facial recognition and location technology allowing people to respond to three random checks a day.

Mr Hunt said the SA app was a breakthrough and praised the ACT government's approach to home isolation for politicians and other essential workers.

A digital border declaration to replace arrival cards is also being worked on to include travellers' vaccination status.

"We want to see Australians be able to travel overseas at the earliest possible time," Mr Hunt said.

Business will also be able to apply for approval to deliver coronavirus vaccines at work, similar to flu jabs.

Western Australia is opening Pfizer appointments to all people aged 12 and over after scrapping the over-60 age limit.

© AAP 2021

Image: Arne Müseler / www.arne-mueseler.com, CC BY-SA 3.0 DE <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/de/deed.en>, via Wikimedia Commons

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Three removalists who travelled to central western NSW from Sydney despite testing positive to COVID-19 have pleaded guilty in court.

Twins Roni and Ramsin Shawka, 28, and Maryo Shanki, 21, travelled from West Hoxton in southwest Sydney to Molong in central-west NSW and stopped in Figtree, South Bowenfels and Orange.

The removalists travelled to Molong in July despite discovering they were COVID-positive en route, police allege.

All three men pleaded guilty on Monday in Orange's Local Court to not complying with a COVID-19 notice direction.

Police escorted the men and their vehicles back to Greater Sydney where they were forced to isolate for two weeks.

Days later a southwest the Shawka brothers' mother died after contracting COVID-19.

The twins were forced to sit in a ute outside her Green Valley property while police conducted investigations inside the house.

NSW Police Minister David Elliott said the removalists had put regional communities at greater risk of the pandemic.

"We know that the delta variant is highly transmissible, and it is unfathomable to think that, with all the public information and health warnings, people could so blatantly ignore the health orders," he said in July.

The men have been listed for sentence before the same court on November 24.

© AAP 2021

Image: brownpau, CC BY 2.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0>, via Wikimedia Commons (image for illustration purposes only)

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1,262 new cases of coronavirus have been detected in New South Wales.

7 people have died with the virus.

Of the 1,262 locally acquired cases reported to 8pm last night, 399 are from South Western Sydney Local Health District, 53 are from Illawarra Shoalhaven LHD, seven are from Hunter New England LHD,

In the Illawarra Shoalhaven

 35 are from the Wollongong Local Government Area (LGA)
 15 are from the Shellharbour LGA
 1 is from the Kiama LGA
 2 are from the Shoalhaven LGA
 18 are linked to known exposures or family clusters and investigations are continuing into the other cases.

Hunter

There were 7 new cases across the Hunter New England LHD to 8pm last night. This brings the total number of cases in the District to 292 since 5 August 2021.

· 3 are from Newcastle LGA

· 2 are from Lake Macquarie LGA

· 1 is from Port Stephens LGA

· 1 is from Mid Coast LGA

Southern NSW

There have been 0 new cases reported in Southern NSW to 8pm last night, bringing the total cases in the LHD to 22 since the start of the current outbreak in June.

SNSWLHD can also confirm there have been 2 new cases identified today, after last night’s 8pm cut off. Both cases are in Queanbeyan and are still under investigation. They will be counted in tomorrow’s numbers.

 NSW Health's ongoing sewage surveillance program has detected fragments of the virus that causes COVID-19 at Gerroa, Moruya and Dungog and Eden.