Thanks for that. Do you know if there is a way to tell when they have stopped? Does Apple issue some type of announcement or at some point do we just have to assume they are no longer doing the updates?They did sporadic updates for the devices left on iOS 12 for a few years (including a recent one), and we know iOS 15.7.1 is in testing. Beyond that, it's anyone's guess as to how much support it'll get.
This isn’t a valid security protection at all. The only thing this accomplishes is that it hides your actual IP address from websites, and also obscures where you’re browsing from your ISP. It does not add any layer of protection to your actual device or computer to prevent exposure to vulnerabilities.If you worry about security..i recommend get a vpn and run it in the background to hide your IP address.
Apple doesn’t make announcements about OS life cycles, unfortunately. They did, however, state that in order to make sure you’re actually getting all known security issues patched, you need to be on the current OS:Thanks for that. Do you know if there is a way to tell when they have stopped? Does Apple issue some type of announcement or at some point do we just have to assume they are no longer doing the updates?
This.Apple doesn’t make announcements about OS life cycles, unfortunately. They did, however, state that in order to make sure you’re actually getting all known security issues patched, you need to be on the current OS:
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Apple warns that iOS 15, macOS 12 devices could still have 'known security issues'
According to a new support document, only the most current OSes get up-to-date security patches.www.macworld.com