Apple has spent the past week rushing to develop a fix for a major security flaw which allows spyware to be downloaded on an iPhone or iPad without the owner even clicking a button. But how do such "zero-click" attacks work, and can they be stopped?
Mobile & Wireless·Vulnerabilities
Apple Security Flaw: How do ‘Zero-Click’ Attacks Work?
Apple has spent the past week rushing to develop a fix for a major security flaw which allows spyware to be downloaded on an iPhone or iPad without the owner even clicking a button. But how do such "zero-click" attacks work, and can they be stopped? The post Apple Security Flaw: How do ‘Zero-Click’ Attacks Work? appeared first on SecurityWeek.

Latest News
- TrueConf Zero-Day Exploited in Asian Government Attacks
- In Other News: ChatGPT Data Leak, Android Rootkit, Water Facility Hit by Ransomware
- Critical ShareFile Flaws Lead to Unauthenticated RCE
- Mobile Attack Surface Expands as Enterprises Lose Control
- React2Shell Exploited in Large-Scale Credential Harvesting Campaign
- T-Mobile Sets the Record Straight on Latest Data Breach Filing
- North Korean Hackers Drain $285 Million From Drift in 10 Seconds
- Critical Vulnerability in Claude Code Emerges Days After Source Leak
