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Apple (AAPL) on Thursday unveiled a unique new security feature designed specifically to take on the kind of dangerous spyware used by governments to eavesdrop on everyone from political dissidents and activists to journalists around the world.
The feature, called Lockdown Mode and available later this year with the release of iOS 16, iPadOS 16, and macOS Ventura, will allow Apple users to cut off access to a slew of communication features on their devices, ensuring, at least for now, that malicious actors can’t access their information.
The reason for the new security capability? Apple’s ongoing fight against Israel’s NSO Group and its Pegasus software, a powerful piece of spyware that can remotely suck up all of the information on a target device without the victim ever knowing.
“Apple makes the most secure mobile devices on the market. Lockdown Mode is a groundbreaking capability that reflects our unwavering commitment to protecting users from even the rarest, most sophisticated attacks,” Apple head of security engineering and architecture, Ivan Krstić, said in a statement.
But while Apple’s update will cut out current versions of NSO Group’s software, it’s far from a permanent solution. And NSO Group, and its competitors, could eventually break through Apple’s security barriers again.
Apple’s fight against Pegasus
Apple is quick to point out that Lockdown Mode is for a very specific group of users. So if you’re not a head of state or corporation, a political activist, or dissident, you likely won’t have to enable the feature.
When activated, however, Lockdown Mode creates a kind of panic room for your Apple device. It disables attachments and link previews in the Messages app, disables certain web technologies in the browser app, blocks things like FaceTime calls unless you’ve previously called a person, and more.
Apple says it will continue to build on Lockdown Mode and release updates in the future. The company is also paying up to $2 million to hackers who can find bugs that break Lockdown Mode, an industry high. Companies regularly pay hackers to break their software in an effort to find bugs that can be used to create malware.
The ultimate piece of spyware
NSO Group’s Pegasus software isn’t your average piece of malware, though. It’s more or less the Holy Grail of spyware, giving the company’s customers, which include governments like Mexico, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates, unfettered access to everything on a target’s Apple device.
The software initially required targets to unknowingly click a malicious link sent to an iPhone, but a secondary version could be installed on a device without the target having to do anything. In either situation, the target would never know that the software was installed on their device.