Hardly. Correlium does not have a physical iPhone. They are making a copy and running them on virtualization software (would love to learn if this is in fact not the case).
That aside, Correlium is alleged to help researchers sell hacking tools based on software bugs found in iOS to government agencies that then use them to hack targets...
Correct me if I'm wrong but aren't they getting sued for breaking iOS terms of service? I think we can all agree that to build the virtualization tool they would first need to have created an iOS image which, as I understand it, is in violation of those terms. You can bet your retirement on Apple winning this one.
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[ 2.6 ms ] story [ 20.1 ms ] threadThat aside, Correlium is alleged to help researchers sell hacking tools based on software bugs found in iOS to government agencies that then use them to hack targets...
Lots to unpack here.
they knew what they were doing was illegal, they missed a good opportunity to become millionaire