So the threshold of concern by a "security" company is "they might audit your apps and find out you're gay!"
Yet not a single concern about tethering an iPhone (with an external connection) to a PC on the company's internal network, bypassing all firewalls, proxies, and other protections. That is grounds for immediate dismissal at some places.
I expect security people to think more like network engineers and less like teenagers gossiping in the canteen.
What do you mean by "tethering an iPhone to a PC"? iPhone Mirroring does not grant the iPhone any privileges to data on the Mac, as far as I know.
Also, there are two orthogonal concerns at play here: Companies generally don't want personal devices (at least those not covered by MDM) to hold company data, but companies also might not want to inadvertently hold personal data of their employees.
This isn't about tethering. It's about mirroring which requires the iPhone and Mac to be on the same WiFi. And you can't route data from the Mac through the phone via mirroring
I don't think iPhone Mirroring requires both devices being on the same (or in fact any) Wi-Fi network. It does however require them to be signed in to the same iCloud account.
Interesting that it works no matter the WiFi. But it’s still not tethering.
Lots of people who are entitled to a corporate smartphone also have a single phone with two sims for work/personal, because of the same reasons: cheaper, more convenient, large data plans on corporate device. These devices are MDM enrolled and the company will at least check what apps are installed.
Yet not a single concern about tethering an iPhone (with an external connection) to a PC on the company's internal network, bypassing all firewalls, proxies, and other protections. That is grounds for immediate dismissal at some places.
I expect security people to think more like network engineers and less like teenagers gossiping in the canteen.