Security researchers have uncovered two vulnerabilities in Apple’s A- and M-series chips, exposing user data to potential cyberattacks.
Owners of Apple Silicon-powered iPhones, iPads, and Macs are faced with a new security risk. “SLAP and FLOP” isn’t the latest fast-action video game; they’re a pair of new Apple Silicon security ...
Speculative execution in Apple Silicon chips like the M2, M3, A15, and A17 boosts performance but also introduces ...
SLAP and FLOP has come to Apple Silicon-powered iPhones, iPads, and Mac. No, it's not the latest fast-action video game, its ...
Whether you’re a veteran Mac user or a macOS Sequoia newbie, you’ve probably heard that Macs never need to be restarted. It’s ...
TSMC founder Morris Chang has revealed that Apple CEO Tim Cook rejected Intel as an iPhone chip manufacturing partner in 2011 ...
Recent findings by security researchers have unearthed vulnerabilities in Apple devices equipped with M2 and A15 chips and newer models.
Two technical papers were published by researchers at Georgia Tech and Ruhr University Bochum detailing CPU side-channel attack vulnerabilities on Apple devices that could reveal confidential data.
Macs, iPhones, and iPads made during and after 2021 may be at risk. However, no attackers have taken advantage.
A new hardware flaw has been discovered that affects all iPhones and iPads with the A15 chip or later, and all Macs with the ...
Phone, iPad, and Mac models powered by newer Apple Silicon have major security flaws that could let hackers steal users' ...
The US tech giant Apple has always advertised security assurances alongside ever faster processor performance for its ...