Technology | iPhone Apple Patent Could Kill Jailbroken iPhones For your own good, though! By Evann Gastaldo Posted Aug 23, 2010 7:35 AM CDT Copied Apple CEO Steve Jobs holds up iPhone 4 as he talks about the Apple iPhone 4 at Apple headquarters in Cupertino, Calif., Friday, July 16, 2010. (AP Photo/Paul Sakuma) The US government is a-OK with you jailbreaking your iPhone but, not surprisingly, Apple is not. To that end, the company applied for a patent to disable jailbroken devices, the Register reports. Ostensibly, Apple just wants to protect you from an unauthorized user breaking into your phone: The patent application describes systems that would automatically detect “hacking programs” that would indicate “an unauthorized user may be using the electronic device” (emphasis ours). Of course, since Apple has no way of knowing who actually “hacked” the phone, it will just assume thieves now have access to all your sensitive information … and can then erase said information from the phone and alert AT&T to shut down service. You know, in order to protect you! Obviously! “In other words,” writes Lauren Indvik on Mashable, “the system described in the patent allows Apple to effectively kill jailbroken devices under the guise of protecting customers from theft.” Read These Next Michael Skakel breaks silence on Martha Moxley murder. She was married at 12. At 25, she faces execution. MAGA infighting intensifies over divisive Tucker Carlson interview. Diane Ladd, who played the salty Flo, dies at 89. Report an error