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-Kabir Jain
Apple goes to extraordinary lengths to keep its supply chain a secret. That wall just got a massive crack in it. A ransomware attack on Tata Electronics has reportedly dumped a huge cache of internal files onto the dark web, and buried in there is information tied to the still unreleased iPhone 18 Pro.

What Happened
Reuters is reporting that a hacking group called World Leaks broke into Tata Electronics’ systems and published over 200,000 files online. Tata isn’t just any supplier here. It both manufactures parts and assembles iPhones, making it one of Apple’s most important partners outside China.
This is easily the biggest leak in Apples history.
Youre looking at the drop test of the iPhone 18 Pro.
Durability seems solid, but its still surprisingly thick, and the weight remains a concern. The new color looks pretty good, though.
The real star this year is the iPhone… pic.twitter.com/0GyJZ5CxaB
— Ice Universe (@UniverseIce) June 30, 2026 “>
The files aren’t limited to Apple either. They reportedly touch older iPhone designs, some Tesla components, and documents connected to chip giants Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co and Qualcomm. But the part that’ll worry Apple the most is the iPhone 18 Pro material. Reuters says it reviewed at least six files that tie specific components, things like the circuit board, battery, and camera system, directly to their suppliers.
That kind of mapping rarely sees daylight. A source told Reuters that Apple treats supplier information for unannounced products as some of its most closely held data, and this leak reportedly includes details the company has never made public.
Why It’s a Bigger Deal Than It Sounds
Apple’s whole manufacturing model depends on secrecy and tight coordination across hundreds of suppliers. When that information leaks, it’s not just embarrassing. It gives competitors, counterfeiters, and even other vendors a map of exactly how Apple builds its phones, down to where it’s relying on a single supplier versus spreading the risk across several.
There’s also a relationship at stake. Tata has become central to Apple’s strategy of building outside China, and that effort lines up with India’s own ambitions to become a bigger player in electronics manufacturing, something the Modi government has actively pushed for. A breach this size doesn’t help that trust.
The timing isn’t great either. Apple’s iPhone 18 Pro and Pro Max are expected to launch in September, and the company is already navigating rising chip costs that recently pushed it to raise iPad and MacBook prices. Some analysts think iPhones could be next.
How Apple and Tata Are Responding
Apple is now investigating the breach and working alongside Tata on security fixes. Tata has locked down access to its internal systems and brought in an outside consultancy to run a forensic review.
Some of the leaked documents reportedly still carry Apple’s internal confidentiality stamps and code names tied to the iPhone 18 Pro line. There are also photos from what looks like a drop-test session at a Tata facility, showing a grey phone with a triple camera setup and an Apple logo. A source believes these are iPhone 18 Pro units, though Reuters hasn’t been able to confirm that independently.
It’s worth noting World Leaks isn’t new to this. The same group has claimed a previous breach involving Nike, and Reuters wasn’t able to reach them for comment this time either. The authenticity of the data hasn’t been independently verified.
The Bigger Picture
This breach lands at a moment when India’s role in iPhone manufacturing is growing fast. Counterpoint Research estimates India will produce 26 percent of all iPhones globally in 2026, a jump from just 6 percent four years ago. A security incident at one of its biggest manufacturing partners is the kind of thing that could complicate that momentum, at least in the short term.
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