Hackers Found An Unpatchable Weakness In A Security Feature That Has Protected Apple Users For Years
Dhir Acharya
Even iPhone users may haven’t of this term, but Apple has a padlock that protects almost all of its products called the Secure Enclave.
- Apple's Liquid Metal Hinge Poised to Deliver Breakthrough for Foldable iPhone After 16 Years of Quiet Research
- iOS 26.5's Under-the-Radar Features: Secret iPhone Tools You Need to Try
- iPhone 18 Rumors Suggest a Significant RAM Upgrade to 12GB
Even iPhone users may haven’t of this term, but Apple has a padlock that protects almost all of its products called the Secure Enclave. The tech giant described the feature as a secure coprocessor consisting of a hardware-based key manager that’s isolated from the main processor, providing an additional security layer.
This feature is used on many models of the iPad, iPhone, Apple Watch, Mac, Apple TV, and HomePod product lines. All the data on such devices is encrypted with random private keys that can only be accessed through the Secure Enclave. Then, the coprocessor stores the keys that manage sensitive data like passwords. The company writes:
“The Secure Enclave also maintains the integrity of its cryptographic operations even if the device kernel has been compromised. Communication between the Secure Enclave and the application processor is tightly controlled by isolating it to an interrupt-driven mailbox and shared memory data buffers.”
Simply speaking, here’s how the Secure Enclave works, when storing a private key in the hardware, you don’t directly deal with the key. In fact, the Secure Enclave is assigned to generate the key, store it securely, and perform operations with it. Eventually, you receive the output of this process only, making it extremely difficult for the key to be compromised.
However, hackers have made a lot of attempts to compromise the key for a long time. In 2017, a group of hackers was able to decrypt the Secure Enclave firmware but they couldn’t access the private keys, so users remain safe.
Unfortunately, a group of Chinese hackers named Pangu Team has found the hardware’s weakness that could allow them to decrypt the private security keys, according to 9to5Mac. With this unpatchable exploit, Apple users now have a reason to worry about their privacy and security.
The exploit in the hardware instead of the software, so Apple cannot fix it remotely with a patch as it does with bugs. So far, there haven’t been any details revealed regarding what the hackers may do with this exploit but they would likely need physical access to a device to make it happen.
So, for now, at least Apple users can hope that as long as they keep their devices secure. Never leaving their eyesight, they will be safe.
>>> Hackers Reportedly Earn 120,000$ From Hacking Major Twitter Accounts
Featured Stories
ICT News - Jun 14, 2026
The Technological Revolution at the 2026 FIFA World Cup
ICT News - Jun 03, 2026
Apple's Liquid Metal Hinge Poised to Deliver Breakthrough for Foldable iPhone...
ICT News - May 29, 2026
New Glenn Rocket Explodes in Massive Fireball During Static Fire Test at Cape...
Mobile - May 24, 2026
iOS 27 Preview: Apple Delivers Its Most Intelligent Siri Yet Alongside Fresh AI...
ICT News - May 08, 2026
Elon Musk Highlights Neuralink Breakthrough with New Surgical Robot for Brain...
ICT News - Apr 13, 2026
DDR4 RAM Prices Finally Fall After Soaring More Than 2,200 Percent
ICT News - Apr 06, 2026
Artemis II Crew Enters Moon's Gravitational Sphere on Historic Day 5
ICT News - Mar 31, 2026
DDR5 RAM Prices Finally Easing: Relief for PC Builders in 2026
ICT News - Mar 29, 2026
FTC Takes Action Against Debanking Practices by Major Financial Firms
ICT News - Mar 27, 2026
Palantir CTO Identifies Iran Conflict as First Large-Scale AI-Driven War
Read More
ICT News- Jun 14, 2026
The Technological Revolution at the 2026 FIFA World Cup
These technologies aim to make the game fairer, faster, and more transparent while preserving its human elements.