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Difference between revisions of "Failbreak"
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− | The term '''failbreak''' refers to a jailbreak that cannot be released, which makes it a fail to some extent. This term came into discussion when [[User:Chpwn|chpwn]] showed a screenshot of his new [[iPhone 5]] running Cydia shortly after its launch on 19 September 2012. Shortly afterward, usage of this term picked up, and on 19 October 2012 even [[User:Planetbeing|planetbeing]] tweeted that he upgraded the '''failbreak''' with a kernel exploit so that tweaks actually work on the [[iPhone 5]], "almost a full tethered jailbreak." |
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+ | The term '''failbreak''' refers to a jailbreak that cannot be released due to a [[#failbreaks|variety of reasons]], which makes it a fail to an extent. This term came about when [[User:chpwn|chpwn]] showed a screenshot of his new [[iPhone 5]] running Cydia shortly after its launch on [[Timeline|September 19, 2012]]. Shortly afterward, usage of this term picked up, and on October 19, 2012, [[User:Planetbeing|planetbeing]] tweeted that he upgraded the "failbreak" with a [[kernel exploit]] so that tweaks actually work on the [[iPhone 5]], to make it "almost a full tethered jailbreak." |
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For the most recent "failbreak" (for iOS 6), the issue preventing its release is that it requires an Apple developer account and developers are under an NDA. |
For the most recent "failbreak" (for iOS 6), the issue preventing its release is that it requires an Apple developer account and developers are under an NDA. |
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− | == |
+ | == failbreaks == |
+ | * iOS 4.2.1 ([[Jailbreak Monte]]) |
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− | *[https://twitter.com/chpwn/status/249249128926806016 @chpwn showing screenshot of his jailbroken iPhone 5] |
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+ | ** Access to iOs 4.2b3 beta for device |
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− | *[https://pbs.twimg.com/media/A3WCwx7CAAAlhvS.jpg:large direct link to image] |
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+ | * iOS 6 on [[S5L8950|A6]] |
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− | *[https://twitter.com/pod2g/status/250530900704624640 @pod2g confirming that chpwn is trustable] |
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+ | ** [[Apple Developer]] account required |
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− | *[https://twitter.com/chpwn/status/252166757643583489 @chpwn mentioning the term the first time] |
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+ | ** Developers under NDA |
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− | *[https://twitter.com/planetbeing/status/259059248795881472 @planetbeing telling about adding the kernel exploit] |
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+ | |||
+ | == References == |
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+ | * @[[chpwn]] with [https://twitter.com/chpwn/status/249249128926806016 jailbroken iPhone 5] |
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+ | * @[[pod2g]] confirming [https://twitter.com/pod2g/status/250530900704624640 chpwn is trustable] |
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+ | * @chpwn mentioning [https://twitter.com/chpwn/status/252166757643583489 the term the first time] |
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+ | * @planetbeing on "[https://twitter.com/planetbeing/status/259059248795881472 the kernel exploit]" |
Revision as of 18:02, 23 October 2012
The term failbreak refers to a jailbreak that cannot be released due to a variety of reasons, which makes it a fail to an extent. This term came about when chpwn showed a screenshot of his new iPhone 5 running Cydia shortly after its launch on September 19, 2012. Shortly afterward, usage of this term picked up, and on October 19, 2012, planetbeing tweeted that he upgraded the "failbreak" with a kernel exploit so that tweaks actually work on the iPhone 5, to make it "almost a full tethered jailbreak."
For the most recent "failbreak" (for iOS 6), the issue preventing its release is that it requires an Apple developer account and developers are under an NDA.
failbreaks
- iOS 4.2.1 (Jailbreak Monte)
- Access to iOs 4.2b3 beta for device
- iOS 6 on A6
- Apple Developer account required
- Developers under NDA
References
- @chpwn with jailbroken iPhone 5
- @pod2g confirming chpwn is trustable
- @chpwn mentioning the term the first time
- @planetbeing on "the kernel exploit"