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The iOS 18.5 update that Apple released today includes a security fix for the iPhone 16e's C1 modem, which is the first Apple-designed modem.

Apple-iPhone-16e-C1-Feature.jpg

According to Apple's security support document for iOS 18.5, there's a fix for a vulnerability with the C1 modem. Apple says that it addressed a baseband security flaw that could allow an attacker "in a privileged network position" to intercept network traffic. Basically, a hacker that had access to cellular network infrastructure could potentially exploit the vulnerability for surveillance or to employ a man-in-the-middle attack.

The C1's baseband is used for signal processing, so it encodes and decodes data for communication between devices and networks, and processes calls, texts, and data connections. Apple addressed the vulnerability with improved state management, which could mean new validation checks to prevent attackers from exploiting weaknesses between operational states.

Apple released the iPhone 16e earlier this year, and today's security update is notable because it marks the first security flaw discovered and addressed in the C1 modem.

iOS 18.5 also includes several other security fixes for vulnerabilities with image processing, call history, Bluetooth, file parsing, FaceTime, Notes, ProRes, WebKit, and more. None of the vulnerabilities fixed today were known to have been actively exploited, but it's still a good idea to update right away.

Article Link: Apple's C1 Modem Gets First Security Update in iOS 18.5
 


[…]

iOS 18.5 also includes several other security fixes for vulnerabilities with image processing, call history, Bluetooth, file parsing, FaceTime, Notes, ProRes, WebKit, and more. None of the vulnerabilities fixed today were known to have been actively exploited, but it's still a good idea to update right away.

Article Link: Apple's C1 Modem Gets First Security Update in iOS 18.5
The above is useful information for the main news article.
 
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I'm a little surprised at how well the Apple Designed modems appear to be working. When Apple moved to the Intel Modems, there was a lot of pushback on the performance relative to the Qualcomm ones. It seems like people are satisfied with the Apple designed ones (for the most part) which is hopefully good news for the future.
 
I always wonder this vulnerabilities new for 18 Os or that means they persists in all older versions?
I wonder when vulnerabilities were introduced too, but older versions are usually patched as well. There were updates to macOS Sonoma, Ventura, and iPadOS 17 today. In March 2025, even iOS/iPadOS 16 and 15 got security updates, which goes way back to the iPhone 6S and iPad Air 2!

 
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I'm a little surprised at how well the Apple Designed modems appear to be working. When Apple moved to the Intel Modems, there was a lot of pushback on the performance relative to the Qualcomm ones. It seems like people are satisfied with the Apple designed ones (for the most part) which is hopefully good news for the future.
I haven’t had any issues with mine, works the same if not better then my last phone.
 
I'm a little surprised at how well the Apple Designed modems appear to be working. When Apple moved to the Intel Modems, there was a lot of pushback on the performance relative to the Qualcomm ones. It seems like people are satisfied with the Apple designed ones (for the most part) which is hopefully good news for the future.
Yes, I am also surprised how well the first iteration went. But I also remember the naysayers when the first M1 came out and it was beating Intel and AMD chips, people were skeptical and blamed flawed testing.
 
Yes, I am also surprised how well the first iteration went. But I also remember the naysayers when the first M1 came out and it was beating Intel and AMD chips, people were skeptical and blamed flawed testing.
The countdown is on for when the EU will say that Apple using their own modems is anticompetitive and it doesn’t allow competition in the Apple cellular modem market. :)
 
Hard to tell if this is a coincidence but I couldn’t make calls properly* after updating my 16e. A reboot fixed it though.

* my call would have no audio/ringing and the call screen never switched to the timer. The person I called confirmed that it did ring on their end.
 
but older versions are usually patched as well.
But not necessarily all known bugs are patched in these versions.

Note: Because of dependency on architecture and system changes to any current version of Apple operating systems (for example, macOS 15, iOS 18, and so on), not all known security issues are addressed in previous versions (for example, macOS 14, iOS 17, and so on).
 
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I'm a little surprised at how well the Apple Designed modems appear to be working. When Apple moved to the Intel Modems, there was a lot of pushback on the performance relative to the Qualcomm ones. It seems like people are satisfied with the Apple designed ones (for the most part) which is hopefully good news for the future.
Do you notice that it has a positive impact on battery life?
 
As long as 18.5 doesn't "unfix" the live captioning bug (the captioning window could not resize after activation - big nuisance because I would often activate the live caption window by accident and I'd have to wait for it to automatically disappear if that happened) that was finally resolved in 18.4, I'm golden.
 
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