Whereas many
general consumers and tech fans will be wondering of all the potential features
Google Glass will be able to harness, the question many developers and security
experts will be asking is simply, "can I hack it?" and if so, how
easy it is to delve deeper than the surface. Google intern / hacker Liam
McLoughlin, who’ll soon have jailbreaking prodigy Comex
for company, has been spending a bit of quality time with Glass since Google
began releasing early models to developers. Having initially discovered a debug
mode within the Glass software that appeared to allow ADB access, he then
reported back a couple of minutes later via his Twitter with the joyous news
that "[it] looks like root is easy."
Although it would be rather naive to
try to pinpoint the depths to which Glass could potentially be modded, McLoughlin’s claims that
there "is fun to be had" with Glass suggests that, much like
the "proper" Android firmware, there’s plenty of potential for
hacking.
As if such news
weren’t encouraging enough, seasoned developer Grant Paul (Chpwn) tweeted to
note of how Jay Freeman (aka Saurik, creator of Cydia), was also busy gaining
root access to Glass. Freeman himself then piped
up with this gem:
#ifihadglass I would jailbreak it and modify the software (obviously).
As Google actually sold me one; I did my part.
Naturally, he included a link to a
shot of his "jailbroken" headgear, and although the most pivotal
member of the iOS jailbreaking scene seems more than happy to dabble in Google
products contrary to its predominantly iOS affiliation, he still remains true
to his, ahem, roots with the tongue-in-cheek jailbreak gag.
So, the
take-home here is that Glass will probably be just as hackable as Android,
which makes sense given that, well, it is, strictly speaking, running on a
variant of the Google mobile OS, version 4.0.4 in its current form, which was confirmed by the company’s
CEO Larry page just last week.
This isn’t just good news for those
that love to hack, but also those that like to see software and hardware pushed
to their very limits. Bypassing Glass’ Mirror API will be the key to this
occurring with Glass, and even at these early stages, things are looking very
promising indeed. [Source]
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