Apple Warns Iranians About Iphone Spyware Attack, by Government.

Apple is warning Iranian iPhone users about government spyware reveals how authoritarian surveillance has turned our most personal devices into digital wiretaps.

Nkeiru Ezekwere
5 Min Read

Apple has been playing digital Paul Revere lately, warning Iranian iPhone users that government spyware is coming for their devices. And unlike that awkward “You left your AirPods at Starbucks” notification, this one is genuinely terrifying.

More than a dozen Iranians got the dreaded “your phone might be compromised” alert from Apple in recent months, according to security researchers who’ve been tracking this digital surveillance campaign. It is like finding out your diary has been reading itself to your parents, except your parents are an authoritarian government.

The Miaan Group, a digital rights organization focused on Iran, and cybersecurity researcher Hamid Kashfi have been documenting these cases. Their findings paint a picture of a government that’s not just watching its citizens; it is practically living in their pockets.

Two of the targets hit particularly close to home: family members of political activists whose relatives have been executed by the Islamic Republic. These aren’t jet-setting dissidents or international troublemakers. They’re people whose biggest crime seems to be existing while related to someone the government doesn’t like.

“I believe there have been three waves of attacks, and we have only seen the tip of the iceberg,” says Amir Rashidi, Miaan Group’s director of digital rights and security. That’s tech-speak for “this is way worse than we thought.”

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This is where it gets unsettling: when researchers tried to help victims investigate these attacks, most of them vanished faster than your phone battery at 1% charge. “Pretty much all victims spooked out and ghosted us as soon as we explained the seriousness of the case,” Kashfi explains. The fear is so deep that people would rather live with compromised phones than risk finding out how compromised they are.

The spyware behind these attacks remains a mystery. It could be NSO Group’s infamous Pegasus, Paragon’s Graphite, or some other digital boogeyman from the growing mercenary spyware industry. These tools don’t just read your texts; they can turn your phone into a walking surveillance device that records conversations, tracks locations, and accesses pretty much everything you thought was private.

Apple has been sending these warning notifications since 2021, reaching users in over 150 countries. That is not a typo, 150 countries. Government spyware isn’t some niche problem affecting a few dissidents in authoritarian states. It’s a global epidemic that has turned smartphones into potential spy devices for anyone a government decides is worth watching.

The company now recommends that anyone who gets these notifications contact AccessNow, a digital rights group that runs a 24/7 helpline for spyware victims. Because apparently, “Have you tried turning it off and on again?” doesn’t work when nation-states are involved.

What makes this particularly chilling is the casualness of it all. Iran’s government isn’t just targeting high-profile dissidents or international journalists. They are going after family members, people whose only connection to political activity is their last name or their relatives’ choices. It’s surveillance by association, a digital version of guilt by bloodline.

The Iranian government’s appetite for digital surveillance shouldn’t surprise anyone familiar with the country’s track record on civil liberties. But the scale and sophistication of these operations show how far authoritarian governments will go to monitor their citizens, even those living thousands of miles away.

The uncomfortable truth is: if you are Iranian, related to someone the government doesn’t like, or just happen to have opinions about freedom, your iPhone might be the least trustworthy device in your life. In a world where our phones know more about us than our closest friends, that’s not just a privacy violation; it is a digital death sentence for dissent.

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