If You Have One of These Older Apple Devices, Update It ASAP
Apple is patching bugs that have been exploited by threat actors.
Whatโs Happening
Real talk: Apple is patching bugs that have been exploited by threat actors.
If you have an older Apple device that doesnโt support the most current operating system, you may not receive every security update pushed to the latest iOS or at least not at the same time. Apple has just dropped a patch for older devices that addresses a handful of bugs that have already been addressed in updates to newer models. (and honestly, same)
Many of these have been exploited in zero-day attacks, so if you have one of the affected devices, you should ensure these updates are installed as soon as possible.
The Details
Zero-day exploits fixed with the update to older iPhones and iPads As BleepingComputer reports, the March 11 security update addresses vulnerabilities used in cyber-espionage and crypto-theft attacks. The bugs are part of the Coruna exploit kit , a spyware and surveillance package with 23 total exploits that targeted iOS releases from 13.
Google Threat Intelligence Group researchers have observed its deployment by state-backed Russian hackers, surveillance vendors, and a Chinese threat actor. The vulnerabilities Apple is patching would allow attackers to escalate permissions to Kernel privileges or gain remote code execution capabilities on affected devices.
Why This Matters
The bugs include CVE-2023-43010, CVE-2024-23222, CVE-2023-43000, and CVE-2023-43010, all of which affect WebKit, and CVE-2023-41974, a Kernel vulnerability. You May Also Like The update applies to older models running iOS 15. IPhone 6s iPhone 7 iPhone SE (1st generation) iPhone 8 iPhone 8 Plus iPhone X iPad Air 2 iPad Mini (4th generation) iPod Touch (7th generation) iPad (5th generation) iPad Pro 9.
This is part of the broader shift happening across the tech industry right now.
The Bottom Line
IPhone 6s iPhone 7 iPhone SE (1st generation) iPhone 8 iPhone 8 Plus iPhone X iPad Air 2 iPad Mini (4th generation) iPod Touch (7th generation) iPad (5th generation) iPad Pro 9. 9-inch (1st generation) Apple patched another zero-day in February of this year for iOS 26, iPadOS 26, and macOS Tahoe that it says may have been exploited in โdeadass sophisticated attack against specific targeted individuals.
Whatโs your take on this whole situation?
Originally reported by Lifehacker
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