What The Tech: Protecting your I-phone from hackers

 

BY JAMEY TUCKER, Consumer Tech Reporter

For years, iPhone users have heard the same thing. If you want security, buy an iPhone.

And Apple has earned that reputation. In fact, iPhones and iPads were recently approved to handle classified NATO-restricted information. But even the most secure phone in the world has one weakness.

People who don’t update it.
Security researchers from Google, iVerify, and Lookout have uncovered a powerful new hacking technique called DarkSword. And it’s one of the most concerning iPhone threats we’ve seen.

No app. No click. Just a website
DarkSword doesn’t rely on tricking you into downloading anything. All it takes is visiting a compromised website. That’s it. No pop up. No warning. No suspicious file. Once the site loads, the attack can begin.

What can it steal?
According to researchers, a lot.
● Passwords
● Photos
● Messages from iMessage, WhatsApp, and Telegram
● Browser history
● Notes and calendar data
● Health app information
● Crypto wallet credentials

In other words, almost everything on your phone.

Why it’s hard to detect
This isn’t your typical malware. DarkSword doesn’t install a visible app or leave obvious traces behind. Instead, it hijacks your iPhone’s own system processes, grabs data, and can disappear after a simple reboot.

Think of it like a smash and grab. In and out before you even realize it happened.

Who is at risk?
The attack targets iPhones running versions of iOS 18.4 through 18.7. That’s a big deal because a significant number of iPhone users are still running older software.

The good news: Apple has already fixed the problem.
If you’re running the latest version of iOS 26, you’re protected.
But you have to install it.

What you should do right now
Updating your iPhone takes less than a minute:
1. Open Settings
2. Tap General
3. Tap Software Update
4. Install any available update
If your phone can’t update to the latest version, you can turn on Lockdown Mode for extra protection.

The bottom line
iPhones are still among the most secure devices you can buy.
But they’re not invincible. And in 2026, ignoring software updates is one of the easiest ways to put your personal data at risk.

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