The challenge: How do you trigger iBoot's USB mode when the main CPU is completely off, without relying on the host computer's standard USB stack being able to "see" the device first?
For Checkm8 to work, you needed to put the iPhone into mode and connect via USB. But if USB Restricted Mode was active, the computer wouldn't even see the device. The jailbreak was dead on arrival for anyone who didn't constantly keep their phone unlocked and plugged in. Ipwnder32
Dora2ios realized that the iPhone's (the code that runs before iOS) had its own very primitive, very old-school USB driver. This driver was not subject to iOS's USB Restricted Mode because iOS wasn't even running yet. The challenge: How do you trigger iBoot's USB
Moreover, within months of its release (early to mid 2020), the jailbreak community found a simpler workaround: . For reasons involving Apple's own USB-C controller firmware, the restricted mode didn't always trigger. Also, tools like checkra1n added a --force-revert option that could sometimes kick the device out of restricted mode using a different exploit. The jailbreak was dead on arrival for anyone
The answer:
Apple had spent years locking down its . By 2019, if an iPhone hadn't been unlocked and connected to a computer in the last hour, its Lightning port would enter a "bricked" state for data. You could only charge. No USB communication. No jailbreak.
A solution was needed—a way to kick the iPhone into a special low-level USB mode before iOS's restrictions took effect. This is where enters the story. The Birth of ipwnder32 In early 2020, a developer known as dora2ios (also known for the "ra1nusb" and "OpenPwnage" tools) was frustrated. The existing Checkm8 loaders (like checkra1n) required a standard USB connection that was often blocked.