Your laptop still works. It runs your applications, handles your files, and supports your daily workflow. Yet suddenly you’re being told it’s no longer secure.
“It’s Unix.” That single phrase has protected macOS from serious security scrutiny for years. The logic sounds convincing: Unix systems have a long history in
Security failures rarely happen because someone forgot a firewall rule. They happen because hardening was treated like a weekend project. A flurry of lockdown changes.
Most organizations believe they’ve “handled” privacy because a toggle is switched off somewhere in settings. But privacy is not a toggle. It’s an architecture. OS
Security headlines often celebrate progress. New isolation layers. Stronger signing requirements. Expanded endpoint telemetry. Yet Windows security bypasses continue to surface—particularly at the kernel boundary.