Within a day after the release of the Apple Vision Pro, a security researcher claims to have created a kernel exploit for visionOS, opening the way towards a potential jailbreak and malware creation.
The first releases of new hardware is often accompanied by a gold rush of security researchers and malware developers working to break the operating system. Just as jailbreak makers try to break iOS, people are already causing security problems for the Apple Vision Pro.
In a late Friday tweet by MIT Microarchitectural Security PHD student Joseph Ravichandran, it is claimed that a kernel exploit has been made for the Apple Vision Pro, potentially the first ever publicly discovered.
The tweets, spotted by iDevice Central, detail in a few photographs how the Apple Vision Pro reacts to the attempted kernel exploit. After being introduced, the Apple Vision Pro goes to a full passthrough view, before warning the user to remove the headset as it will restart within 30 seconds.
After the restart, another image shows a panic log for the headset, showing that the kernel had crashed.
Given Apple’s tendency to work fast on security issues, as well as the high-profile nature of the Apple Vision Pro launch, it is likely that Apple will issue an update fixing the problem if the issue is disclosed.
At this extremely early stage, considering the slow roll-out of devices to a generally tech-literate early adopters, it seems unlikely that the discovery will cause issues for Apple and its users.
This story originally appeared on Appleinsider