Hackintosh has been around for almost 2 decades and AFAIK Apple hasn't threatened legal action on anyone except those trying to profit monetarily from it (the only one that comes to mind being Psystar).
Apple now even publicly distributes macOS from its site with no authentication required, something that certainly wasn't true in the early days of Hackintosh.
Given that some Hackintoshers may be doing it for the purposes of "security research" (bug bounty chasing), which indirectly benefits Apple, I don't think they will change the unsaid stance anytime soon.
On the other hand, its attempts at destroying right-to-repair and third-party OEM parts shows what it actually worries about.
Apple now even publicly distributes macOS from its site with no authentication required, something that certainly wasn't true in the early days of Hackintosh.
Given that some Hackintoshers may be doing it for the purposes of "security research" (bug bounty chasing), which indirectly benefits Apple, I don't think they will change the unsaid stance anytime soon.
On the other hand, its attempts at destroying right-to-repair and third-party OEM parts shows what it actually worries about.