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Apple extends security updates to older iPhones at risk of hacking

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Julian Chokkattu/Digital Trends / Apple

For years, updating your iPhone meant committing to a new software design and features, whether you liked it or not. There was no option to stay on an older version and still get security fixes. You either moved forward or accepted the risks. But Apple is now doing something it almost never does. It is rolling out security updates for older iOS versions, even for iPhones that can run the latest software. That might sound small, but for Apple, this is a pretty big deal.

This shift didn’t happen randomly. It was pushed by a serious hacking technique called DarkSword. This exploit can take over certain iPhones running iOS 18 just by getting you to visit a compromised website. One wrong click and your phone could be compromised before you even realize something’s off. While users on the latest iOS were already protected, millions of people still using iOS 18 were left exposed. And that’s where the problem started to feel like a risk Apple couldn’t afford to ignore.

A rare move, and a necessary one

Now, Apple is offering a middle ground. It has released a security patch for iOS 18 itself, a move known as “backporting.” It means fixing security issues in older software without forcing users to upgrade. This is something Apple usually reserves for much older devices that physically cannot run the latest iOS. Doing it for newer devices, just because users chose not to update, is new territory. And while it’s a welcome change, there’s a slight sense of this should have happened sooner. For weeks, users remained exposed while the threat continued to spread.

DarkSword isn’t some niche exploit used by a handful of elite hackers. Just recently, another hacking toolkit called Coruna forced Apple to release patches for even older iOS versions. Two major threats in such a short span aren’t a coincidence.

Apple is adapting, even if reluctantly

Apple still wants you to update to the latest iOS. That hasn’t changed, and it probably never will. But this move shows that the company is starting to accept reality. People don’t always update. And in a world where threats are becoming more common and more aggressive, leaving those users unprotected is no longer an option.

There’s also something slightly reassuring about this shift. It feels like Apple is listening, even if it took a bit of pressure to get here. And if this is the direction Apple continues in, it might just make iPhones feel a little more secure for everyone.

Shimul Sood
Shimul is a contributor at Digital Trends, with over five years of experience in the tech space.
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