Your iPhone might not be yours anymore
So here's what's wild— DarkSword. Sounds like a sci-fi villain, right? Turns out, it's a real-deal, powerful iPhone-hacking technique. And it's not some hypothetical thing; Russian hackers are apparently already using it. Like, your phone, the one you use to order a burrito from Illegal Pete's at midnight after a show at Red Rocks, could have a digital squatter. It’s a good reminder that just because you're chilling by Sloan's Lake watching the sunrise, doesn't mean your digital life is secure. I mean, we're already dealing with enough digital noise with all the new "luxury" apartments going up in RiNo, now we gotta worry about state-sponsored hackers in our pockets?
Okay, context— this isn't just a basic phishing scam. This is sophisticated stuff, the kind of tool that can pry open millions of iPhones. It makes you wonder, if these things are out there, what else are we not hearing about? Imagine trying to plan your I-70 ski trip to Vail, mapping out the traffic ahead, and some shadowy figure is just... watching. The idea that your personal device, which feels like an extension of yourself up here in the thin air, could be compromised without you even knowing? That’s a whole different kind of altitude sickness.
Mile high on the wire— altitude and attitude.
The crew on the Morning Wire talks about stuff like this every day — you should check it out live at mornings.live.