(Donald Trump listens to his mobile phone during a lunch stop in South Carolina.AP Photo/Matt Rourke)
President Donald Trump loves to use the bully pulpit.
His favorite megaphone is Twitter, often sending tweets from an "old, unsecured Android phone," especially while watching TV at night, according to the New York Times' Maggie Haberman.
Trump's aides have tried to take the phone from him, but they've been unsuccessful. Trump sent tweets from Android as recently as Friday.
Photographic evidence suggests his phone is a Samsung Galaxy S3, which was first launched in 2012 and last received an Android security update in 2015.
Experts believe that Trump's phone is a security threat — he could be phished or hacked, experts say. It's even conceivable that someone could hack the device and turn it into a "room bug" listening in on the West Wing or the Oval Office.
It's understandable that Trump may not want the ultra-secure phone that President Barack Obama received, which was only able to communicate with pre-approved people. "This is a great phone, state of the art, but it doesn’t take pictures, you can’t text, the phone doesn’t work, you can’t play your music on it," Obama said last year.
But that doesn't mean the President needs to carry around a security risk.
There's actually a middle ground, and while the Secret Service might not love this proposal — iPhones are still commercial devices — it would make Trump much more secure in "the cyber," as he once put it.
Trump should get an iPhone.
It is not a debate among security professionals; Apple's mobile operating system, iOS, is much more secure than Android.
Since Apple controls what software runs on iOS, there is generally much less malicious code that is able to infiltrate the device.
Apple also makes lots of decisions that may seem harsh, but are smart from a security perspective. For example, all iOS apps — like Twitter — are forced to use App Transport Security, meaning that their traffic is encrypted.
Apple's iPhone also gained the ire of the FBI in 2016 when the bureau discovered it couldn't extract data from a dead terrorist's iPhone without outside help, because of the way iPhones handle full-disk encryption. And the company that is suspected of provided that outside help, Cellebrite, can't hack recent iPhones, it was discovered in a recent data dump.
Most importantly, iPhones get security updates that patch critical flaws on a regular basis. If Trump was using an iPhone as old as his purported Galaxy S3, it could run Apple's latest operating system, iOS 10, with all the most up-to-date bug fixes.