Mystikken breder sig…
28. Jan 2008, 19:30 af Martin i Nyheder
Zibri, en af de hackere der har bidraget mest til arbejdet med at hacke iPhonen, har i dag postet et indlæg på hans lbog (link: Zibri’s Blog, åbner i nyt vindue.), hvis eneste indhold er billedet i ser her til vesntre.
På billedet står “This key is VERY important. Maybe you don’t know what it is. Apple does
18 84 58 A6 D1 50 34 DF E3 86 F2 3B 61 D4 37 74″
Jeg har ingen anelse om hvad det betyder, men i en kommentar skriver han:
“This Key has nothing to do with the baseband. About 1.1.2 and 1.1.3 OOTB i can tell you we did progress. This key is something even more important, but not for unlockers.”
Opdatering: Det er nu bekræftet, at der er tale om den nøgle Apple bruger til at kryptere ramdiskene med på iPhonen. Da den nu er offentlig kendt betyder det, at enhver kan dekryptere softwaren på iPhonen, hvilket skulle øge mulighederne for jailbreak og unlock betydeligt.
Relaterede indlæg
- iPhone unlock-status
- Project Jerry: Unlock af 1.1.2 OOB og 1.1.3 OOB
- Apple frigiver iPhone OS 3.1 beta
- WinPwn 2.5 tæt på frigivelse
- Muligvis hurtigt unlock af iPhone 3G S
Relateret annoncelink
- Billige Mobiler - ADVARSEL: Køb ikke mobiltelefoner før du har set prisoversigt og tests!



Entries (RSS)
NielsTr
Ifløge TUAW, så er det SDK developer key.
http://www.tuaw.com/2008/01/28/rumors-iphone-application-key-reportedly-leaked/
28. January 2008 @ 21:53
LaWiPi
Ifølge Zibri selv er det ikke… :-/ Mystikken breder sig stadig!
“I wonder how rumors run quickly and I am very disappointed
by Erica Sadun of TUAW for telling people this was
a key related to SDK or the “Application Key”.
Well.. i never said it. And, frankly, it’s NOT
I posted this only because I hate disinformation.”
Eller se det her: http://zibree.blogspot.com/
30. January 2008 @ 07:10
harnov
The iPhone “Secret” key
Strip the first 0×800 bytes from your >= 1.1.1 firmware ramdisk
Run:
openssl enc -d -in ramdisk.dmg -out de.dmg -aes-128-cbc -K 188458A6D15034DFE386F23B61D43774 -iv 0
Ignore the error. Then there will be some garbage, signatures and certificates, at the end of the file. Remove it and mount your ramdisk.
Why would this key be published without any explanation of what it is? Apple knows what it is, not telling us how to use it doesn’t serve a purpose for anyone. I don’t know exactly what this key is or where it came from. But I do know it decrypts ramdisks
Nice job to Zibri, the dev team, and whoever owns Austin Heap for finding this key, I’d love to see the hack used. Sadly this will not help us unlock BL 4.6 phones, or sign our own SDK apps; sign anything for that matter. But hopefully this key is deeply embedded in the iPhone, and decrypting all future ramdisks will be a piece of cake.
http://iphonejtag.blogspot.com/2008/01/iphone-secret-key.html
30. January 2008 @ 12:33