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Difference between revisions of "X-Gold 608 Unlock"
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* Read geohot's [http://iphonejtag.blogspot.com/2008/07/infineon-we-have-problem.html blog post] |
* Read geohot's [http://iphonejtag.blogspot.com/2008/07/infineon-we-have-problem.html blog post] |
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* Read dogbert's [http://dogber1.blogspot.com/2010/06/how-to-protect-better-apple-iphone.html blog post] |
* Read dogbert's [http://dogber1.blogspot.com/2010/06/how-to-protect-better-apple-iphone.html blog post] |
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[[Category:Baseband]] |
[[Category:Baseband]] |
Revision as of 01:28, 27 December 2010
Until recently, the 3G software unlock was the biggest missing piece of the iPhone community. It proved more difficult than the previous unlocks due to the fact that the baseband bootloader is signature checked by the bootrom. The iPhone Dev Team has successfully unlocked baseband firmwares by overriding carrier locks on-the-fly in RAM, therefore at boot the baseband bootrom can validate the bootloader, and the bootloader can validate the baseband.
RAM Unlock History
On December 21, 2008, MuscleNerd demonstrated yellowsn0w, the first unlock.[1] Originally, yellowsn0w was designed for basebands 2.04.03 and earlier, until geohot shared the AT+stkprof Exploit with them. On January 27, 2009, Apple released iOS 2.2.1, which contained baseband 2.30.03 and patched said exploit.
Oranav discovered another exploit (the AT+XLOG Vulnerability), and shared it with the iPhone Dev Team for the next unlock. The iPhone Dev Team kept it under wraps to target firmware 3.0 and the iPhone 3GS. The unlock, codenamed ultrasn0w, was released to the public on 23 June 2009 for baseband 4.26.08 only. [2]
iOS 3.1 contained a baseband 5.11.07, which patched the AT+XLOG Vulnerability. The AT+XEMN Heap Overflow was exploited in a new unlock named blacksn0w, released by geohot on 3 November 2009. A few months later, the vulnerability was patched in baseband 5.12.01.
When iOS 4.0 was publicly released, an updated release of ultrasn0w was released, using the AT+XAPP Vulnerability to unlock all basebands found in firmwares 3.0 through 4.0. Apple countered this with a baseband update in iOS 4.1.
Possible Methods
Class 1
- Find an exploit in the bootrom to break the chain of trust. The Dev-Team successfully dumped the bootrom, but they won't release it as it's copyrighted code.
- Improve by several orders of magnitude the NCK brute forcer, and find a way to extract the CHIPID and NORID
- Find the theorized algorithm of NCK generation
- Factorize the RSA keys used for signing
- Find a second preimage for a signature
Class 2
- Use a SIM hack such as the TurboSIM Unlock
- Find a way to patch running memory to "unlock" the phone on every bootup. This is how ultrasn0w works.
- Find an exploit in the Baseband Bootloader so you can downgrade the baseband, then use ultrasn0w. Geohot and the iPhone Dev Team found (independently) an exploit in bootloader 5.8, but it isn't useful enough as only very-early (week<30) iPhone 3G units have bootloader 5.8.
Resources
- Read about the X-Gold 608
- Read geohot's blog post
- Read dogbert's blog post
- 25C3 presentation "Hacking the iPhone"