Apple issues warning to all iPhone users over new iOS 26.3 update
Published on Feb 12, 2026 at 8:32 PM (UTC+4)
by Alessandro Renesis
Last updated on Feb 12, 2026 at 8:32 PM (UTC+4)
Edited by
Emma Matthews
Apple has already issued a chilling warning to all iPhone users, literally hours after releasing the iOS 26.3 update.
To be fair, this warning sounds like every other warning, because these warnings always sound like the end of the world.
But there’s a reason it should be taken seriously.
Mainly because it fixes a problem that Apple has been trying to solve for ages.
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This is why Apple issued such a chilling warning
The new iOS 26.3 update fixes a critical vulnerability that is already being exploited by hackers on more than one occasion.
The update addresses around 40 different security vulnerabilities across the system, including bugs that could potentially allow hackers to see your photos or deleted notes from the Lock Screen.

This has already happened, by the way – there have been confirmed attacks like this before.
The previous update had already fixed the issue, but only temporarily and only partly, whereas this one should fix it for good.
What’s new with iOS 26.3
The new iOS 26.3 update includes a few minor upgrades and a couple of meaningful ones.
There are a few changes to Lock Screen Weather, and it also includes a new privacy toggle to restrict how accurately carriers can track your device.
In the EU, iOS 26.3 also allows your iPhone to integrate with other watches and headphones – not just Apple ones.

More importantly, the new update adds ‘Transfer to Android’, which makes it infinitely easier to transfer files from Android to iPhone and vice versa.
This is a huge deal because it confirms that Apple is slowly easing its historically very strict approach to Apple-Android interoperability.
For the longest time, said interoperability was basically zero.
AirPods, iPhones, and iPads weren’t even using the same charger as everyone else.
Then things changed, partly because the company revised its policy, and also because the EU intervened.
One contributing factor – though not the only one – in Apple’s decision to adopt USB-C was the need to comply with EU mandates and avoid the massive fines that would have followed non-compliance.
After beginning his automotive writing career at DriveTribe, Alessandro has been with Supercar Blondie since the launch of the website in 2022. In fact, he penned the very first article published on supercarblondie.com. He’s covered subjects from cars to aircraft, watches, and luxury yachts - and even crypto. He can largely be found heading up the site’s new-supercar and SBX coverage and being the first to bring our readers the news that they’re hungry for.