It was 2014, or maybe early 2015. The golden era of the "second-hand iPhone" market. Shipping containers full of recycled electronics were arriving daily, and Elias had carved out a niche doing the one thing the big repair shops wouldn't touch: software issues.
iRemove Tools 1.2.8 on Windows 7 represents a fascinating but now-obsolete artifact of the iOS bypass arms race. Its reliance on kernel-level USB exploits, unsafe NOR writes, and a permanently vulnerable host OS makes it unsuitable for any production or personal use in 2026. iremove tools 1.2.8 windows 7