Some commentators point to Apple’s new “Liquid Glass” interface as a possible reason for the resistance. Critics argue that while the redesigned look emphasizes visual depth and aesthetics, it sometimes sacrifices usability. Others suggest the hesitation is simply normal resistance to change. Still, the scale of the delay is unusual by Apple standards.
Security analysts stress that the reasons no longer matter. With Apple limiting fixes to iOS 26, users who stay on older versions are exposed by default. Analytics Insight warns that attackers often target users who delay updates, making this group especially attractive to spyware developers.
James Maude of BeyondTrust sums it up bluntly: upgrading is no longer optional. The vulnerabilities already being exploited are likely to become standard tools for a wide range of threat actors.