Comment by varispeed
Comment by varispeed 14 hours ago
No mention of Pegasus and other software of such sort. Can latest iOS still be infected?
There is no point creating such document if elephant in the room is not addressed.
Comment by varispeed 14 hours ago
No mention of Pegasus and other software of such sort. Can latest iOS still be infected?
There is no point creating such document if elephant in the room is not addressed.
Why? The obvious conclusion is that Apple is doing everything in its power to make the answer “no.”
You might as well enumerate all the viruses ever made on Windows, point to them, and then ask why Microsoft isn’t proving they’ve shut them all down yet in their documents.
That analogy misses the asymmetry in claims and power.
Microsoft does not sell Windows as a sealed, uncompromisable appliance. It assumes a hostile environment, acknowledges malware exists, and provides users and third parties with inspection, detection, and remediation tools. Compromise is part of the model.
Apple’s model is the opposite. iOS is explicitly marketed as secure because it forbids inspection, sideloading, and user control. The promise is not “we reduce risk”, it’s “this class of risk is structurally eliminated”. That makes omissions meaningful.
So when a document titled Apple Platform Security avoids acknowledging Pegasus-class attacks at all, it isn’t comparable to Microsoft not listing every Windows virus. These are not hypothetical threats. They are documented, deployed, and explicitly designed to bypass the very mechanisms Apple presents as definitive.
If Apple believes this class of attack is no longer viable, that’s worth stating. If it remains viable, that also matters, because users have no independent way to assess compromise. A vague notification that Apple “suspects” something, with no tooling or verification path, is not equivalent to a transparent security model.
The issue is not that Apple failed to enumerate exploits. It’s that the platform’s credibility rests on an absolute security narrative, while quietly excluding the one threat model that contradicts it. In other words Apple's model is good old security by obscurity.
Words words and more words, new levels of verbosity even for a hacker, to say Apple has a weakness and isn't saying they've patched it with certainty; as though nation-state spyware can be conjured on demand from the heavens until governments throw up their hands and say "curses, you've fixed everything, we surrender." Even if there actually were no bugs remaining, I certainly wouldn't sign an affidavit saying no bugs will ever be found in the future.
Apple did create a boolean for that. They call it lockdown mode.
> Lockdown Mode is an optional, extreme protection that’s designed for the very few individuals who, because of who they are or what they do, might be personally targeted by some of the most sophisticated digital threats. Most people are never targeted by attacks of this nature. When Lockdown Mode is enabled, your device won’t function like it typically does. To reduce the attack surface that potentially could be exploited by highly targeted mercenary spyware, certain apps, websites, and features are strictly limited for security and some experiences might not be available at all.
Lockdown mode works by reducing the surface area of possible exploits. I don't think there's any failures here. Apple puts a lot of effort into resolving web-based exploits, but they can also prevent entire classes of exploits by just blocking you from opening any URL in iMessage. It's safer, but most users wouldn't accept that trade-off.
Apple's head of SEAR (Security Engineering & Architecture) just gave the keynote at HEXACON, a conference attended by the companies who make Pegasus such as NSO Group.
That doesn't seem like avoiding the elephant in the room to me. It seems like very much acknowledging the issue and speaking on it head-on.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Du8BbJg2Pj4