A well-known iPhone hacking team has released a new jailbreak software that unlocks every iPhone, even the latest models running the latest iOS 13.5.
As long as Apple maintains its walled garden approach to iPhones by only approving apps and customizations, hackers have tried to release it under the name "prison", hence its name. 
Jailbreak hackers do this by detecting an earlier unknown regulation in iOS that violates many of the restrictions Apple has imposed on access to this basic software. Apple says it does this for security reasons. 
But jailbreakers say that by breaking these restrictions, they can make their iPhones more customizable than they want, as most Android users are already accustomed to.
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| (Photo Source: MIKI Yoshihito) | 
It supports all iPhones that support the iPhone 11, released by the useless, non-motivational team, including iOS 13.5, which Apple released this week.
Hackers may not know the details of the threat they used to create the jailbreak, but it is not expected that they will last forever. Just as jailbreakers work to find ways, so Apple works faster to fix bugs and prevent jailbreaks.
Security experts generally advise iPhone users against jailbreaking, as breaking the "wall garden" significantly increases the surface area for new threats to be detected and detected.
The jailbreak comes at a time when glitter has eroded Apple's generally strong security image. Last week, action broker ZeroDem said it would no longer buy some of the iPhone's weaknesses because of the large number of them. The Motherboard reported this week that hackers got their hands on a pre-release version of the upcoming iOS 14 several months ago.

 
 
 
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