"What is Apple doing to prevent any government contractor from being able to use enterprise apps?"
Which is what you're actually asking. "Spyware" sounds like you're conflating with its traditional meaning of being a general consumer malware/virus plague. This is software made by companies that provide services and support for [among others] intelligence agencies, etc for actual targeted spying.
If you disagree with that being the actual question, then you're saying that having access to the enterprise is dependent on Apple auditing your entire company, its corporate hierarchy, its owners, and its executives - at least. That isn't going to be cheap, it isn't going to be fast, I'm sure you'd not be happy as a company to find distributing internal apps suddenly requires regular expensive audits, or as an employee to discover your employer now required you to agree to background checks, etc by Apple.
The whole, and it seems only, reason for the enterprise program was so companies ("enterprises" in marketing) could have internal apps that didn't have to pass the App Store review process.
It would have been vastly easier to convince a victim to install a piece of software from the App Store, but that would not have worked because despite naysayers the App Store as a first step in platform security works. Otherwise there would be unending stories of malware on HN :D
"What is Apple doing to prevent any government contractor from being able to use enterprise apps?"
Which is what you're actually asking. "Spyware" sounds like you're conflating with its traditional meaning of being a general consumer malware/virus plague. This is software made by companies that provide services and support for [among others] intelligence agencies, etc for actual targeted spying.
If you disagree with that being the actual question, then you're saying that having access to the enterprise is dependent on Apple auditing your entire company, its corporate hierarchy, its owners, and its executives - at least. That isn't going to be cheap, it isn't going to be fast, I'm sure you'd not be happy as a company to find distributing internal apps suddenly requires regular expensive audits, or as an employee to discover your employer now required you to agree to background checks, etc by Apple.
The whole, and it seems only, reason for the enterprise program was so companies ("enterprises" in marketing) could have internal apps that didn't have to pass the App Store review process.
It would have been vastly easier to convince a victim to install a piece of software from the App Store, but that would not have worked because despite naysayers the App Store as a first step in platform security works. Otherwise there would be unending stories of malware on HN :D