Hundreds Of Millions Of iPhones Can Be Hacked With A New Tool Found In The Wild
Released on 03/19/2026
A phone hacking technique capable of taking over
any of hundreds of millions of iOS devices
has appeared in the wild,
in the hands of multiple hacker groups
in an easily reusable form.
That means if you haven't updated your iPhone,
you should do it now.
Let me explain.
Researchers at Google and cyber security firms,
IVerify and Lookout have revealed the discovery
of a sophisticated tool known as DarkSword.
that can instantly and silently hack iPhones
that visit infected websites
to essentially steal any information stored on the device.
DarkSword doesn't affect Apple devices
using the latest version of iOS, iOS 26,
but devices running the previous version of iOS, iOS 18,
which still accounts for as many
as a quarter of all iPhones remain vulnerable.
This new hacking technique has appeared just weeks
after we at WIRED reported on a separate,
even more sophisticated iPhone hacking toolkit
known as Coruna,
which Google said was in use by what it described
as a Russian state-sponsored espionage group.
DarkSword appears to have a different creator,
but researchers found it was being used
by those same Russian spies
and was like Coruna embedded in components
of otherwise legitimate Ukrainian websites.
It was also according to Google,
used by hackers to compromise the phones
of victims in Saudi Arabia, Turkey, and Malaysia.
That suggests DarkSword is being passed around
or sold to multiple hacker groups,
and it's likely only a matter of time
until it's hitting users in Western countries too.
In fact, the Russian spies who used it most recently
left it in a fully reusable form
on the websites where it was found,
complete with helpful comments from the developer
left in the code explaining how to use it.
The appearance of two different powerful
iPhone hacking techniques in just one month
implies an increasingly active market for the resale
of exploits that once were considered extremely rare
and only to be used in highly targeted attacks
against individual victims.
What was once really only a worry for opposition,
politicians, journalists, activists,
or other high risk targets
may now be a concern for everyone.
An Apple spokesperson told WIRED
that IOS's most stringent security setting Lockdown Mode
does protect users from both Coruna and DarkSword,
and noted that Apple has released security updates
protecting against both hacking techniques.
And the company wrote in a statement
that keeping software up to date
remains the single most important thing users can do
to maintain the high security of their Apple devices.
So, yes, update your iPhone.
And for more on DarkSword, read our full story at WIRED.com.
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