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An iPhone-hacking technique used in the wild to indiscriminately hijack the devices of any iOS user who merely visits a website represents a rare and shocking event in the cybersecurity world. Now one powerful hacking toolkit at the center of multiple mass iPhone exploitation campaigns has taken an even rarer and more disturbing path: It appears to have traveled from the hands of Russian spies who used it to target Ukrainians to a cybercriminal operation designed to steal cryptocurrency from Chinese-speaking victims—and some clues suggest it may have been originally created by a US contractor and sold to the American government.
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几何体:骨架,决定了形状(是方的、圆的,还是扭曲的)。
M5 Pro and M5 Max chips
As of September 30, 2025, more than 405,000 xTool devices were connected online worldwide. 80% of users used their devices at least once a month, and 40% used them daily.