Apple (and the others) controls how much they invest in writing secure code, and how they manage the trade-offs with, for example, investment in shiny new functionality.
So when they make a security slip up and write code that contains an exploit, it's a good thing that the market punishes them.
Apple (and the others) controls how much they invest in writing secure code, and how they manage the trade-offs with, for example, investment in shiny new functionality.
So when they make a security slip up and write code that contains an exploit, it's a good thing that the market punishes them.