Apple expands iOS 18.7.7 to more devices to block DarkSword web attacks


Apple has expanded iOS 18.7.7 and iPadOS 18.7.7 to more devices after security researchers identified web-based attacks called DarkSword targeting older iPhone software. Apple says the wider rollout started on April 1, 2026, so users with Automatic Updates turned on can receive the protections automatically.

This is not a brand-new patch. Apple says the fixes tied to DarkSword first shipped in 2025, but it widened iOS 18.7.7 availability so more users still on iOS 18 can get them without jumping immediately to a newer major release.

Apple also makes the risk clear. The company says these were web-based attacks that targeted out-of-date versions of iOS through malicious web content, meaning a bad link or a compromised website could put user data at risk on an unpatched device.

Apple is pushing older iOS users to update now

Apple says users already running the latest updated versions of iOS 15 through iOS 26 are protected. For iPhone owners still on older iOS 18 builds, Apple has now enabled iOS 18.7.7 for more devices and says those devices will also receive an additional alert to install a Critical Security Update.

That makes this rollout unusual, even by Apple standards. The support note does not frame iOS 18.7.7 as a normal maintenance update. Instead, Apple ties the wider availability directly to protection from DarkSword web attacks and to the need to shield users who have not yet moved to the newest software branch.

Apple still says the best option is to move to the latest version of iOS 26 if the device supports it, because that release carries the strongest security protections. At the same time, Apple is giving iOS 18 users a more direct path to protection instead of leaving them exposed while they delay a major upgrade.

What iOS 18.7.7 actually fixes

Apple’s security page for iOS 18.7.7 lists a broad set of patched issues across system components, not just one browser flaw. The release includes fixes in areas such as 802.1X, AppleKeyStore, Audio, Clipboard, CoreMedia, CoreUtils, Crash Reporter, Kernel, Security Framework, and WebKit.

Several of the listed issues could expose sensitive data, crash processes, leak kernel memory, or weaken browser security boundaries. Apple’s note also shows that some of the bugs involved malicious web content, which lines up with the company’s separate warning about web-based DarkSword attacks.

One important detail from Apple’s note is that the expanded availability covers far more hardware than the original limited iOS 18.7.7 listing suggested. Apple now shows support reaching from iPhone XR, XS, and XS Max through newer iPhone 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, and 16 models, plus supported iPads across several generations.

Key security changes in Apple’s note

AreaApple’s summary
802.1XA privileged network attacker may be able to intercept traffic
AppleKeyStoreAn app may be able to cause unexpected system termination
AudioMalicious web content may trigger an unexpected process crash
ClipboardAn app may be able to access sensitive user data
CoreMediaA crafted media file may terminate the process
KernelMultiple flaws could leak kernel state or memory
Security FrameworkA local attacker may be able to access Keychain items
WebKitMultiple web content issues could affect browser security

Source: Apple security content for iOS 18.7.7 and iPadOS 18.7.7.

What users should do right now

  • Update to the latest iOS 26 release if your device supports it. Apple says it offers the strongest protections.
  • If you are staying on iOS 18, install iOS 18.7.7 immediately. Apple expanded it on April 1 specifically for these protections.
  • Turn on Automatic Updates so critical security fixes arrive faster.
  • Keep Safari protections enabled. Apple says Safe Browsing blocks the malicious URL domains identified in these attacks and is on by default.
  • Enable Lockdown Mode if you are a higher-risk user or cannot update right away. Apple says it protects against these specific attacks even on out-of-date software, though you should still update as soon as possible.

FAQ

What is DarkSword?

Apple describes DarkSword as a set of web-based attacks targeting out-of-date iOS versions through malicious web content. Apple’s public notes do not provide the kind of detailed exploit-chain breakdown seen in some secondary reports.

Did Apple really expand iOS 18.7.7 to more devices?

Yes. Apple says it enabled the availability of iOS 18.7.7 for more devices on April 1, 2026, so users with Automatic Updates turned on can automatically receive the protections.

Do I need iOS 26 to be safe?

Not necessarily. Apple says devices with the latest updated versions of iOS 15 through iOS 26 are already protected. Still, Apple recommends moving to the latest iOS 26 version when possible because it offers the strongest security protections.

Does Lockdown Mode help?

Yes. Apple says devices with Lockdown Mode enabled are protected from these specific attacks, even on out-of-date software, although Apple still advises updating to the latest iOS version as soon as possible.

Readers help support VPNCentral. We may get a commission if you buy through our links. Tooltip Icon

Read our disclosure page to find out how can you help VPNCentral sustain the editorial team Read more

User forum

0 messages