You can use a repo and package limiting tool on jailbroken devices, and make 
sure that only whitelisted packages/repos are accessible. Also, for those 
sensitive data, something like TLS/IPSec will help a lot.

On Oct 14, 2013, at 22:59, Fritz Anderson <fri...@manoverboard.org> wrote:

> On 13 Oct 2013, at 11:45 PM, Maxthon Chan <xcvi...@me.com> wrote:
> 
>> Maybe you have to tell your management that it is technically infeasible to 
>> do so in iOS without jailbreaking. Either you bake them all in/use separate 
>> SpringBoard icons or the dynamic libraries will not be loaded in vanilla iOS 
>> device without black magic.
> 
> Jailbreaking hasn't deterred some of our potential clients, who were 
> determined to get what they wanted, jailbreaking be damned.
> 
> Our network carries data the disclosure of which is a felony. I had to 
> explain that we simply could not make a policy of bringing computers that had 
> been rooted by God-knows-who inside our security wall. Management isn't 100% 
> likely to shy away from security disasters, but it makes more weight than 
> jailbreaking's being technically inadvisable.
> 
>       — F
> 

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