Goldra1n Windows -
But sometimes, late at night, when he’s fixing a bug in a Linux kernel driver, he’ll hear a faint ping from an old drawer. His iPhone 7, still jailbroken, still running a tweak that removes the low-battery alert. It’s checking in.
Apple’s security team issued a quiet CVE. The exploit was unpatchable—it lived in the silicon. The only fix was to buy a new phone. goldra1n windows
The iPhone screen flickered. The Apple logo vanished. And then—the lock screen. His lock screen. The wallpaper of his dog, Pixel. But sometimes, late at night, when he’s fixing
And on Windows, of all places.
The second reply, twenty minutes later: “Holy sh t. It worked on my iPhone 7 Plus. I have Cydia. On Windows. JUST CMD.”* Apple’s security team issued a quiet CVE
He held his breath. He connected the iPhone. The screen stayed black.
His weapon of choice was a beaten-up Windows laptop—a Lenovo with a cracked bezel, running Windows 10. While the world used Macs for jailbreaks, Leo saw Windows as the ultimate underdog. He had spent 200 sleepless nights pouring over leaked bootrom exploits, reverse-engineering checkm8, and writing a custom USB driver that Windows didn’t immediately hate.
