Apple is Sucking off a Man Caught Between Woman’s Legssending out another round of spyware warnings to targeted users in 98 countries this week.
On Wednesday, numerous iPhone users reportedreceiving these messages and posted their experiences along with screenshots.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
"Apple detected that you are being targeted by a mercenary spyware attack that is trying to remotely compromise the iPhone associated with your Apple ID," reads Apple's notification, addressed to targets from a [email protected] contact. "This attack is likely targeting you specifically because of who you are or what you do. Although it’s never possible to achieve absolute certainty when detecting such attacks, Apple has high confidence in this warning — please take it seriously."
In its notification, Apple says it's been sending these types of warnings to affected users since 2021.
However, it seems these notifications first started using the "mercenary spyware attacks" language more recently. Apple described the spyware attacks in Aprilas such, but TechCrunchreports that previous language from Apple described the attacks as "state-sponsored." That language no longer appears in Apple's warnings.
Apple says in the notification that the iPhone users receiving the warning are likely being targeted due to who they are or what they do. In viewing social media posts from users sharing the notification, it seems a significant number of these users work as journalists or in news media in some capacity.
The spyware warning from Apple doesn't provide any specific details regarding the threat. This is usually the case with Apple's warnings, which are meant to warn users so that they take proactive measures to protect their accounts and devices before they are actually compromised.
Shortly after the last Apple notification in April, cybersecurity researchers reportedthat Apple's warning was related to a surveillance spyware toolset known as LightSpy.
Mashable will monitor this story as more information about this latest attack becomes available.
Topics Apple Cybersecurity iPhone
Reading Between the Lines: “Gilded Age Drawings at the Met”Death’s FootstepsThe best Black Friday deals on Apple AirTags in 2023Reading Between the Lines: “Gilded Age Drawings at the Met”Celebrating Umoja Karamu, a “Ritual for the Black Family”The Life and Afterlife of Vivian Maier by Pamela BannosThe Sentence That Is a Story by Jeff DolvenBest deals of the day Jan. 27: 85Dear Lynda: Diary Snoops and IllAll This Blood and LoveBest Black Friday Roomba deals at Amazon 2023Best deals of the day Jan. 30: 5thWhite Man on a PedestalDeath’s FootstepsHow A Godless Democrat Fell in Love With Cowboy PoetryWhat Is the Political Responsibility of the Artist? by Taylor PlimptonTinder adds new features like prompts and dark modeBlack History by Asali SolomonWhite Man on a PedestalEureka Moment: Ernest Hemingway, Sam Lipsyte, James Wright by The Paris Review Apple might launch two new iPhones with triple cameras this year Footballer's school talk on internet security ends in a porn screening Dog assassins rule in 'John Wick: Chapter 3' CinemaCon footage Kit Harington should go full thirst trap after ‘Game of Thrones’ Samsung's Galaxy Note 10 might come in four different versions How Twitter fueled the wild rise of vote rigging allegations Why so many people type 'lol' with a straight face: An investigation Elton John biopic 'Rocketman' ignites CinemaCon with new footage Nintendo is bringing virtual reality to 2 of its biggest Switch games Paul Rudd is 50 years old and the internet doesn't believe him Fake iPhone scam cost Apple $895K Watch hilarious 'Game of Thrones' sketches from 'Saturday Night Live' Congress just got climate change testimony from eloquent teenagers Russian fishing boat finds an enormous surprise in their fishing net Joss Whedon calls on celebrity superheroes one last time to get out the vote Amazon must let shareholders have a say in selling of controversial facial recognition tech A new 'Walking Dead' series debuting with 10 episodes in 2020 Amy Schumer: people who don't vote are "steamy dumps" Dropping $500,000 to spend New Year's Eve with Justin Bieber is a good idea 'Take Back the Prom' campaign wants to change prom culture
2.3858s , 10127.8203125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Sucking off a Man Caught Between Woman’s Legs】,Fresh Information Network