The origin of the jailbreak goes back to the beginning of the iPhone in 2007, when there was no app store at the time, and external applications could not be installed in the usual ways, so the main function of the jailbreak was to allow them to be downloaded, but Apple was not too late and released the software store, which despite its overwhelming success, but the jailbreak community It continued to grow because a lot of users wanted to modify the iPhone and add features that Apple did not allow, but does the jailbreak still carry the same importance today?

So the jailbreak era is over?


It has been 347 days since the last jailbreak was released

If you are a fan of the jailbreak or even a follower from afar, then you will know that the jailbreak before was always released very close to the issuance of the system, but that many versions were being jailbroken in their beta stage and thus the developers were challenging Apple to find the loopholes. Without fear of losing it, but what is new now is that the unrestricted and stable jailbreak of the current system has not been released and its last issue has been nearly a year!


See what the opinion of the founder and pioneer Cydia jailbreak

In an interview with (Jay Freeman), the founder of the Cydia Store, who had the greatest credit in the world of jailbreaking, Freeman stated that even if you can jailbreak your device running on iOS 10, it is not recommended! The founder of the cydia jailbreak has officially declared dead, and it was repeated by (Nicholas Allegra), one of the pioneers who had a favor in the world of jailbreaking, that he feels that the jailbreak is "completely dead" now that it has become a need to break the protection of the device and make the usual sacrifices of safety and others for a very small return to the user. Also, Luca Todesco, one of the brightest developers, Allegra says, who could have added something valuable to jailbreak has announced his leaving the jailbreak world.


How much do users need to jailbreak?

In recent years, Apple has done a great job to fill in the gaps that users want to jailbreak for, and has even added other features different from those of the jailbreak, but it replaces them, so users have tended to use it, and the user now is not the same user ten years ago, so users have become inclined. Towards enjoying an easy experience free from complexity and downloading applications unlike before when modification in the phone was permanently a pleasure for users, or perhaps because of the lack of applications at the time and perhaps the evolution of the form of the operating system contributed to discouraging users from modifying it as well.


What about the developers?

The jailbreak community has attracted developers for a while to troubleshoot and exploit security bugs and also create apps without any restrictions or controls, but what about now? Why lack of developers' enthusiasm for maintaining jailbreak and making apps for it? The answer can be summed up in several points.

Apple has greatly increased the security of the system, as the company issues security updates with a lot of sub-updates, that is, an average of several times a year.

◉ The hacker who finds a security hole can now sell it for exorbitant prices that could reach a million dollars. Compared to the diminishing jailbreak market, sacrificing all that money to jailbreak may be considered crazy.

Most of the major hackers who worked on the jailbreak have left it and moved to work in high-paying security jobs.


It turns into a fatal spiral

Thus said (Freeman), the founder of Cydia, he explained that "there are fewer users who are interested in doing jailbreaking, and therefore there are fewer developers who are interested in creating unique applications, so that users do not find good applications and leave the jailbreak, so the number decreases, the developers do not find users and leave the jailbreak .." And this cycle continues leading to death. Jailbreak slowly.


Are you still using the jailbreak? Do you think it will end soon? Or is he already dead?

Source:

CultOfMac

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