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Cydia's App Store For Jailbroken iPhones Shuts Down Purchases (iphonehacks.com)

Cydia, the App Store for jailbroken devices, is shutting down purchases as its creator moves to shut down the store entirely in the near future. "Cydia's creator Saurik made the announcement on Reddit after a bug was discovered in the platform that may have put user data at risk," iPhonehacks reports. "This bug prompted Saurik to clarify the issue and reveal that he has been planning on shutting down Cydia for quite a while now." From the report: The founder clarifies that the bug only puts a limited number of users at risk who are logged into Cydia and browse a repository with untrusted content -- a scenario which Saurik has strongly advised against right from day one. Plus, he also says that this is not a data leak and he has not lost access to PayPal authorization tokens. Coming to the harsh reality, Saurik says that he has been looking to shut down Cydia Store before the end of this year. The reports of a data leak have acted as a catalyst to bring the timetable further up. There are multiple reasons as to why he is looking to shut down the service including the fact that he has to pay for the hefty hosting bills from his own pocket.

Saurik has already gone ahead and shut down the ability to buy jailbreak tweaks in Cydia. This means that one can no longer use the Cydia Store to buy jailbreak tweaks on a jailbroken iPhone. On the bright side, Saurik does intend to allow users to download jailbreak tweaks that they have already paid for. Saurik will also make a more formal announcement about the shutting down of Cydia sometime soon. Do note that this change relates only to Cydia Store and not Cydia the installer which is used to install tweaks on a jailbroken device. The latter will continue to work as usual.

6 of 40 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Did it even work after 2013? by nawcom · · Score: 2

    Yes, it did work after 2013. No issues that I experienced. If Cydia didn't work correctly then the jailbreak app which installs Cydia with it was faulty somehow. I remember a couple times where it didn't initially work and redoing the jailbreak would fix it. I've lost interest in it probably since iOS 11 but I actively jailbroke before then.

  2. Let 'em crash by Stormwatch · · Score: 3, Insightful

    iPhone users are a weird bunch. They knowingly choose the more restrictive platform, then try to find workarounds, rather than choose the platform that is more open in the first place. To quote one of the greatest movies ever: "they bought their tickets, they knew what they were getting into. I say, let 'em crash."

    1. Re:Let 'em crash by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      iPhone users are a weird bunch. They knowingly choose the more restrictive platform, then try to find workarounds, rather than choose the platform that is more open in the first place.

      So 2008, when Cydia was created. iPhone ran a full unix userland and toolset.

      Your options were Microsoft Windows phone, which ran Microsoft software for a few minutes before locking up and needing rebooted.

      Then there was blackberry, which was less than steller without a multi tens of thousands of dollars per year exchange addon.

      Android didn't exist.

      Let me guess, you are a Microsoft fanboi, claiming they are open?
      Or you just don't believe anyone should use phones by running Android that doesn't exist and won't for a number of years?

      Or just a standard Apple hater because they are successful? Perhaps all three?

    2. Re:Let 'em crash by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yes, I understand that was justifiable back then. But I'm saying, if you buy an iPhone TODAY, you can't really complain much. Its restrictiveness is well-known, so you buy one accepting that as part of the package. If you want openness, you just go and get an Android -- which has long ceased to be an inferior option.

      So let me get this straight.

      When Cydia started, when the iPhone was one of the most powerful systems after jailbreaking, because we did so makes us "a weird bunch"?

      Now today, when that isn't the case anymore, and the entire jailbreaking scene has moved on to better things, to the point even Cydia and it's infrastructure is shutting down, that makes us "a weird bunch"?

      Absolutely no one is complaining about how restrictive iPhone is today. In fact all of the powerusers aren't buying iPhones today. They aren't jailbreaking. Even the infrastructure to do so is being closed down due to being of less use.

      Why does that make us a weird bunch?

      Would not the weird thing be to continue needlessly running the cydia repos that aren't being used?
      Or continuing to jailbreak iPhones when better options exist?

      I just can't place at any point in time, now or then, any aspect that is weird and not completely expected and sensible.
      Your insult towards the old cydia group and those that use it "being weird" sounds exactly that, a hateful insult for no reason.

    3. Re:Let 'em crash by Powercntrl · · Score: 2

      If you want openness, you just go and get an Android -- which has long ceased to be an inferior option.

      Openness on Android just means more businesses are able to vie for your money and/or personal information. Most smartphone manufacturers lock down the bootloader to prevent you from modifying the OS, and some (Samsung's phones sold in the USA comes to mind) don't even allow you to unlock it.

      Even if you do unlock your bootloader and root your phone, Google's SafetyNet API necessitates all sort of nasty hacks to retain any semblance of usability, since these days many apps refuse to run in an insecure environment. If you want your smartphone to "just work", chances are, you're not going to be hacking it anyway. iOS has workarounds for side-loading apps, so the difference between walled gardens is academic at this point. The battle for an truly open mobile OS has been lost.

      --

      ---
      DRM is like antifreeze, to the MPAA/RIAA it's sweet, to the consumers it's poison.
    4. Re:Let 'em crash by Highdude702 · · Score: 2

      Have been jailbreaking iphones for years now(seriously worthless otherwise) and have never paid for a single app/program through cydia or otherwise.