Can .safetensors file infect non-jailbroken iPhone?

I’m using iOS 26.3 on an iPhone 17 Pro Max. A few months ago, in November 2025, I downloaded a large AI model file (.safetensors, approximately 613 MB) from Civitai. The file was named NSFW-22-H-e8.safetensors and was saved in my Downloads folder within iCloud Drive.


I never opened but i did imported the file into mage space AI on safari but then deleted it later. Despite this, I’ve been concerned that it might contain malware. However, I took several precautions:


- I performed a quick restart immediately after deleting the file.

- Apple Store scanned my phone and confirmed that there were no malware or issues.

- A local phone shop also scanned and confirmed that the file was clean.

- VirusTotal (from what I recall) indicated that the file was safe.


I’ve attached a screenshot of the file information before I deleted it.


Since then, Ive noticed unusual behavior (battery drain, no pop-ups, and the phone performs sluggish). If could just be ios 26.3 being a slow buggy mess Nevertheless, I’m still anxious and plan to return to Apple for another check or reset.


I’m wondering if a .safetensors file (which is purely data for AI models) can infect a non-jailbroken iPhone simply by being downloaded. Or am I overthinking this based on how iOS operates?


I would greatly appreciate any reassurance or advice you can provide.

iPhone 17 Pro Max

Posted on Mar 1, 2026 6:10 PM

Reply
Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Posted on Mar 1, 2026 10:45 PM

A .safetensors file cannot infect a non‑jailbroken iPhone because iOS cannot execute or run this type of file under any circumstances:


A .safetensors file is a data‑only AI model file, not an executable, script, installer, or runnable program, so it cannot perform any action on iOS.

iOS blocks all executable code unless it comes from the App Store or is signed by Apple, so a downloaded file cannot run, install, or infect anything.

Importing the file into a Safari‑based AI tool does not execute the file; it only uploads the data to the website, which cannot run code on your device.

Deleting the file removes it completely from iCloud Drive and the device; iOS does not allow hidden background processes from user files.

Apple Store diagnostics confirming “no malware” is definitive because iOS has no system‑level access for third‑party malware to hide.

VirusTotal showing the file as clean further confirms it was just a normal AI model file with no executable content.

 A restart, reset, or Apple Store scan would have immediately revealed any system modification — none was found because none is possible from a .safetensors file.


In short and as Lobsterghost1 told you above, You have nothing to be worried about.


Axel F.



Similar questions

2 replies
Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Mar 1, 2026 10:45 PM in response to luckyplayz_

A .safetensors file cannot infect a non‑jailbroken iPhone because iOS cannot execute or run this type of file under any circumstances:


A .safetensors file is a data‑only AI model file, not an executable, script, installer, or runnable program, so it cannot perform any action on iOS.

iOS blocks all executable code unless it comes from the App Store or is signed by Apple, so a downloaded file cannot run, install, or infect anything.

Importing the file into a Safari‑based AI tool does not execute the file; it only uploads the data to the website, which cannot run code on your device.

Deleting the file removes it completely from iCloud Drive and the device; iOS does not allow hidden background processes from user files.

Apple Store diagnostics confirming “no malware” is definitive because iOS has no system‑level access for third‑party malware to hide.

VirusTotal showing the file as clean further confirms it was just a normal AI model file with no executable content.

 A restart, reset, or Apple Store scan would have immediately revealed any system modification — none was found because none is possible from a .safetensors file.


In short and as Lobsterghost1 told you above, You have nothing to be worried about.


Axel F.



This thread has been closed by the system or the community team. You may vote for any posts you find helpful, or search the Community for additional answers.

Can .safetensors file infect non-jailbroken iPhone?

Welcome to Apple Support Community
A forum where Apple customers help each other with their products. Get started with your Apple Account.