A security researcher claims to have discovered an expliot that could lead to jailbreaken iOS models released as recently as 2017. Just as significantly, checkm8 supposedly can’t be patched by Apple, ...
Is it just me, or is 'game changer' a little strong? It doesn't allow decryption of data on-device. It doesn't persist after a reboot. Any malicious code installed isn't removed on reboot, but won't ...
Jailbreaking gains popularity to users who can't bypass certain apps on a specific platform. For instance, some iPhone owners could not access third-party software due to restrictions from Apple.
Researchers have found a new unpatchable BootROM vulnerability in older iPhones that lets attackers run any code on your iPhone.
Apple has been working hard to increase the security of its operating systems and devices, and this has been proven considering that hackers had a hard time creating a jailbreak tool for iOS 15. But ...
Not good: Security researchers have figured out a way to compromise Apple's T2 security chip. The hack involves combining two iPhone exploits and allows attackers to gain "full root access" to the Mac ...
A researcher claims that the issue can be exploited by attackers in order to gain root access. A researcher is claiming that Apple devices – with a macOS operating system and a T2 security chip – are ...
For points 3 and 4 at least, except for iPhone 5 and earlier, I don't see it that way. Hackers will still have to find a way to break the Secure Enclave, as it enforces the 10 attempt rule which stops ...