WARNING: Do Not Go Back To January 1, 1970 With Your iPhone; It Will Die!

  • by: Alan Duke

If you are a time traveler or you just like to do odd things with your iPhone, avoid setting the date and tome to January 1, 1970. People who have done it -- for whatever reasons -- have learned the hard way that it will freeze your phone and turn it into an expensive paperweight.

"There's no known way to fix it through software right now," Tech blogger Zach Straley said in a video posted on YouTube February 11, 2016. Take your new brick to an Apple store and you'll find "the geniuses don't know what's up, they just end up replacing your iPhone."

A Reddit post suggested the glitch is caused a conflict resulting from that date being the start of Unix time, a reference point for developers:

Connecting the device to iTunes and restoring the device to factory defaults will not put the device back in working order. Instead, a physical repair is required. When connected to public Wi-Fi, iPhone calibrates its time settings with an NTP server. Theoretically, attackers can send malicious NTP requests to adjust every iPhone's time settings to January 1, 1970, hence brick every iPhone connected to the same network."


  Alan Duke

Editor-in-Chief Alan Duke co-founded Lead Stories after ending a 26-year career with CNN, where he mainly covered entertainment, current affairs and politics. Duke closely covered domestic terrorism cases for CNN, including the Oklahoma City federal building bombing, the UNABOMBER and search for Southeast bomber Eric Robert Rudolph. CNN moved Duke to Los Angeles in 2009 to cover the entertainment beat. Duke also co-hosted a daily podcast with former HLN host Nancy Grace, "Crime Stories with Nancy Grace" and hosted the podcast series "Stan Lee's World: His Real Life Battle with Heroes & Villains." You'll also see Duke in many news documentaries, including on the Reelz channel, CNN and HLN.

Read more about or contact Alan Duke

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