Dopamine jailbreak lead developer Lars Fröder (@opa334dev) released an updated build of Dopamine v2 on Wednesday, officially bringing the rootless, semi-untethered jailbreak tool up to version 2.0.6.
Dopamine jailbreak lead developer Lars Fröder (@opa334dev) released an updated build of Dopamine v2 on Wednesday, officially bringing the rootless, semi-untethered jailbreak tool up to version 2.0.6.
In case you missed it, the Dopamine v2 semi-untethered jailbreak tool for various iOS & iPadOS 15 and 16 devices was updated once more over the weekend to version 2.0.5 with another handful of bug fixes and improvements that benefit anyone who began depending on the tool when it launched on Friday.
The Dopamine v2 jailbreak launched yesterday with official support for the Kernel File Descriptor (KFD) exploit with the puaf_landa method and, by extension, the new PPL bypass.
Earlier today, Dopamine jailbreak lead developer Lars Fröder (@opa334dev) released Dopamine v2, adding support for newer versions of iOS & iPadOS 16 on various devices by way of the Kernel File Descriptor (KFD) exploit and the recently released PPL bypass.
In an unexpected turn of events on Friday, Dopamine jailbreak lead developer Lars Fröder (@opa334dev) released version 2 of his jailbreak tool with support for the new PPL bypass and the Kernel File Descriptor (KFD) exploit with puaf_landa.
Apple earlier this month released iOS & iPadOS 17.3.1 to the general public with bug fixes and improvements for iPhones and iPads.
TrollStore is an amazing utility that lets users perma-sign any .ipa or .tipa file as an app on their iPhone or iPad on certain firmware susceptible to a CoreTrust exploit without a computer.
It was only a week ago that we reported on the Def1nit3lyN0tAJa1lbr3akTool semi-untethered Kernel File Descriptor (KFD) exploit-based jailbreak tool for arm64 devices running iOS & iPadOS 15.7 and 16.0-16.6.1 officially coming out of beta.
It was only just last night that the RootHide development team pushed version 1.2 of its Procursus-based bootstrap for devices running iOS & iPadOS 14.0-17.0 with updated builds of Sileo and Zebra and a plethora of other bug fixes and improvements. But as it would seem, the team wasn’t done.
If you use the RootHide development team’s Procursus-based bootstrap, then you might be excited to learn that there’s an updated build available to the general public as of this Sunday afternoon.
Apple’s brand-new Vision Pro spatial computer, the Cupertino-based company’s take on what’s basically a virtual reality headset (despite Apple’s attempt to not to have it branded as one), has only been available to the public for one day. But that hasn’t stopped talented hackers from working their magic on it.
We’ve long understood Misaka to be a package manager that you could sideload or perma-sign on an iPhone or iPad to view a catalog of packages supporting the MacDirtyCow (MDC) and Kernel File Descriptor (KFD) exploits, but what if we told you that you didn’t even need to sideload or perma-sign the app?