The Cydia app store for jailbroken iPhones has shut down

The store was very popular during the early years of the iphone due to apple being more restrictive back in those days, its also worth noting that apple has implemented many of the jailbroken tweaks and applications making it less popular. The owner of the store creator Jay Freeman (aka Saurik) has shut down the Cydia Store citing a combination of costs and security issues. And while Freeman had already planned to close the store by the end of 2018, he brought it forward a week after learning of a security breach that let users purchase apps through their accounts if you were logged in and browsing untrusted app repositories.

This is not the end of jailbreaking it just the end of a centralised store portal users will still have access to Repositories to download, Freeman said, the necessary bandwidth represents the “majority of [his] costs” for Cydia and its just not worth it for him now to carry on. Jailbreaking will carry on but its obviously in decline. The option to run unsanctioned code was hot in the iPhone’s early days, when iOS had many more limitations and homebrew apps could enable major features like third-party keyboards which apple now allows. Apple also tends to patch security holes very quickly now. This is another reason why it’s simply not worth their effort to release one. 

Source https://www.reddit.com/r/jailbreak/comments/a5wfq9/news_andrew_wiik_recommend_that_everyone_removes/ebpur5a/

Possible jailbreak coming to iOS 11.2.1 firmware

There have been possible jailbreaks coming to iOS 11.1.1 firmware one is by Liang Chen from Keen Lab. The bad news? It’s not available to the general public at the moment but it could change at anytime.

Alibaba’s Pandora Lab have also made a bold claim, stating that there is an untethered jailbreak available that will work well with Apple’s iPhone X. They code named the jailbreak “Pandora”. Its unlike other semi-tethered jailbreaks, Pandora installs Cydia on the Home screen.

Unfortunately,  fresh news has come to light by Song Yang, the head researcher at Alibaba’s Pandora Lab that the jailbreak is only for security research purposes, and, like Chen’s jailbreak, won’t be released to the public.  This exploit has in fact been already submitted to Apple and the exploit will likely be patched in the next version of iOS 11. They often submit these exploits to Apple, because it can prove to be very a lucrative business for these companies.   

So while you may not be able to jailbreak iOS 11.2.1 at all this moment this proves that it could happen at anytime in the future.