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Plastic webcam covers—especially of the sliding kind—boomed in popularity sometime in the 2010s as a low-tech way to keep hackers from eavesdropping on compromised machines. The concern felt justified at the time. But by 2020, Apple was beginning to issue warnings that those covers aren’t actually needed and can even damage a MacBook’s display.
For this Security Bite, let’s set the tin-foil hats aside and talk about why webcam covers don’t meaningfully improve privacy, can cause features like True Tone to not work properly, and are far more likely to damage your screen than stop someone from spying on you.
Green light indicator myth
On more modern Macs—those with Apple Silicon and Intel (post-2008)—a malicious hacker can’t turn on your webcam without also triggering the green privacy indicator. The camera module hardware doesn’t allow it.
Macs produced before 2008 are a different story, though. Security researchers at Johns Hopkins published a 2013 paper showing that Macs released prior to 2008 could, under certain advanced attacks, be coerced into powering the camera without the green LED indicator. It makes sense considering back then, Apple tied the camera sensor and indicator together with software.
However, this changed in late 2008, when Apple redesigned the camera module so the sensor and the green light share the same physical circuit. This way, the camera couldn’t receive power unless the LED did too. Fast-forward to today, and there’s still no known malware capable of bypassing that hardware design, likely because there’s no software to compromise anymore.
Paper-thin screen clearance
Apart from the danger to privacy, there’s also a danger of seriously cracking your MacBook’s screen.
Apple explicitly warns against closing a MacBook (Air or Pro) with anything thicker than 0.1 mm—basically a sheet of paper—between the display and the chassis. Today’s Retina panels are super thin and sit on extremely tight hinge tolerances. When you stick a cover over the camera and close the lid, you’re applying pressure to a concentrated spot on one of the most fragile parts of the screen.
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