Bypass Untethered — Ipad 2 9.3.5 Icloud

A: No. The iPad will reject Apple ID logins because activation records are patched. You use the device as a “kiosk” or with local accounts only.

For years, the iPad 2 was considered impossible to bypass untethered. However, a specific exploit tool, often referred to as "Robbery Purple" or the "Purple" tool, changed the game specifically for the iPad 2 on iOS 9.3.5.

A: Yes, but the cellular radio will be disabled. Wi-Fi works fine. Ipad 2 9.3.5 Icloud Bypass Untethered

| Function | Works? | Notes | |----------|--------|-------| | Wi-Fi | ✅ Yes | Fully functional | | Safari / App Store (old apps) | ✅ Yes | App Store may fail to sign in – use legacy iTunes or sideload | | iMessage / FaceTime | ❌ No | Apple activation servers reject bypassed devices | | Cellular (3G models) | ❌ No | Baseband disabled to prevent relock | | Push Notifications | ⚠️ Partial | Some apps work, most don’t | | Restore/Reset | ❌ No | Doing “Erase All Content” will re-enable iCloud lock |

Unlike modern bypass tools that use a "checkm8" exploit (which is tethered), the Purple tool utilizes a different vulnerability specific to the A5 chip architecture found in the iPad 2. A: No

If you have an iPad 2 specifically running iOS 9.3.5 (the highest OS it supports), this tool allows for a genuinely Untethered Bypass. This means once the process is done on a Windows PC, the iPad is essentially "fixed." You can restore it, set it up, and use it indefinitely without needing to re-jailbreak or re-bypass after every reboot.

For the iPad 2 on 9.3.5, true untethered iCloud bypass is rare and historically required either: For the iPad 2 on 9

Since the iCloud lock is removed, you can load photos via a PC/Mac using a USB cable (iTunes file sharing) or email them to yourself. Place the iPad 2 in a dock, turn on "Guided Access" (found in Settings > Accessibility) to lock it to the Photos app, and you have a gorgeous, free digital photo frame for your desk.

Old bypass methods were "tethered." If your battery died, you had to plug it into a PC to reboot it. That’s useless for a lifestyle device.

The current method (using tools like Sliver or Arduous on Mac/Windows) writes a permanent file to the /var directory. This means: