Apple totally dissed WikiLeaks this week — here's why
Assange
Assange

(WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange.Reuters/Peter Nicholls)

Julian Assange's website WikiLeaks is in possession of what appears to be CIA hacking tools that can target popular computers like Apple's iPhones and Macs as well as products from other big tech companies like Microsoft and Google.

Assange has said that WikiLeaks will share details of the vulnerabilities with Apple and other big tech companies, so they can fix the vulnerabilities that the CIA uses for its hacking tools.

"We have decided to work with them to give them some exclusive access to the additional technical details that we have so that fixes can be developed and pushed out," Assange said in a press conference earlier this month.

But Apple didn't sound very grateful to Assange for his "exclusive" offer. In fact, Apple's public response to WikiLeaks was downright frosty. "We have not negotiated with Wikileaks for any information," said Apple in a statement provided to Business Insider on Thursday.

The statement said that WikiLeaks was just like anyone else, despite its stolen CIA files: It could submit bugs through a standard process, and that while they may have been briefly in touch, Apple hasn't seen anything that hasn't been tweeted or posted to the WikiLeaks website.

"We have given them instructions to submit any information they wish through our normal process under our standard terms," according to the statement. "Thus far, we have not received any information from them that isn’t in the public domain."

Then, to top it off, Apple says that WikiLeaks, with its public threat to release ways to attack Apple and other tech companies' products after 90 days if bugs are not "fixed," is actively working to harm iPhone users:

"We are tireless defenders of our users' security and privacy, but we do not condone theft or coordinate with those that threaten to harm our users."

There's no other way to read this as anything but an unconditional slam on Julian Assange, and essentially, a promise that Apple will not work with him or WikiLeaks.

Apple is not happy with WikiLeaks at all.

Why this matters

Mr Robot
Mr Robot

(USA)

What hackers like those that work for the CIA need to really control someone's phone or computer is what's called a "zero-day" vulnerability.

Zero-days are basically secret bugs that can be used by professionals to break software and gain access to a system. But one problem for the CIA and other hackers is that zero-days expire: as soon as they're known, the tech companies fix the bug, making the exploit useless.

Apple, in particular, kills vulnerabilities all the time, and said all the bugs mentioned in the WikiLeaks files so far have already been patched. (Google and Microsoft are also equally good at squashing zero-days — maybe even better than Apple.)