XPost: misc.phone.mobile.iphone, alt.privacy
Wade Garrett wrote:
On 12/13/22 1:38 PM, [email protected] wrote:
See subject line
Well whoopty freakin' do...
FACT: There were over 30 security holes in iOS that iOS 16.2 fixes.
Yes. That's how _bad_ Apple quality control is for the iOS relesae.
And yes, _exploited_ zero-day holes are included in that fact.
Remember Apple has _never_ in its entire history found its zero-day holes.
*Nobody who makes a smartphone OS has more zero-day holes than Apple*
Bearing in mind Apple quality control is incompetent (by Apple's own
admission, which we've discussed from their public internal emails),
it's not surprising that Apple didnt' find a ton of holes in iOS (again).
Never forget the fact that no smartphone operating system has more zero-day holes than iOS, simply because Apple R&D spends almost nothing to test iOS.
Apple essentially shoves iOS out to the user base to test for them.
(And to the hackers, by the way, given NSO penetrated the iOS kernel many times, while Pegasus has never been able to penetrate the Android kernel).
*Why does iOS have so many releases to fix holes Apple didn't find?*
Remember, nobody spends _less_ in R&D than does Apple, and likely, nobody spends more in MARKETING claiming that they have tested their products.
Also bear in mind the recent huge lie Apple was forced to admit, which is
only iOS 16.x will have the latest bugfixes (i.e., 15.x is vulnerable).
--
Posted out of the goodness of my heart to disseminate useful information
which, in this case, is to explain why no smartphone operating system is as insecure as is iOS.
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