Unbricking my bricked iPad

I know this is late, but me too. My poor M1 Pro iPad has been bricked for almost two weeks now. I have tried absolutely everything. I tried replacing different wires, used different computer, made a Genius Bar appointment and they had the same results. I even cursed at the thing for a bit. Nothing seemed to work. I finally got it un bricked, however, I'm not sure what finally worked. I went into settings > network then turned off the firewall and filters. (I had Intego virus/net barrier running.) To my surprise, I actually got my iPad back! However, I couldn't restore from back up and had to start from new.


Maybe this can help someone.



Posted on Oct 19, 2025 1:28 PM

Reply
Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Posted on Oct 20, 2025 5:55 AM

There are no true Antivirus Products available for iOS/iPadOS. Those that claim to provide AV protection are little more than “snake oil”, have negligible if any tangible benefit - and for Apple devices should generally be avoided. Very often, Apps of this nature introduce more issues than substantive benefit or functionality.


Unlike traditional Operating Systems with which you may be familiar, iOS/iPadOS uses a sandboxed security architecture. As such, Apps cannot access any data outside of their own sandbox - and cannot access the storage and resources of other Apps. As such, it is impossible for an Anti-Virus App to scan the filesystem.


Apps of this type should be removed from the device - and a force-restart performed.


Remove or delete apps from iPad - Apple Support

Force restart iPad - Apple Support


In some instances, it may be necessary to restore the iPad to factory settings - as, ultimately, you appear to have done:

Restore your iPhone, iPad, or iPod to factory settings using a computer - Apple Support



Providing that your iPad has been kept up-to-date with system software updates, you should not be overly concerned for your iPad being directly compromised by malware. Due to the system architecture of iOS/iPadOS, unless jailbroken, your iPad is not susceptible to traditional malware infection per-se. However, as with all computer systems, there are still vulnerabilities and exploits to which you remain vulnerable.


For older devices, no longer benefiting from regular security updates, the risk of an unpatched vulnerability being exploited increases. Regardless of the installed version of iPadOS, there are useful mitigations that can be used to significantly reduce your exposure to risk.



Threat Mitigation


Other than malicious websites that will attempt to capture information that you willingly enter, the majority of threats to which you will be invariably exposed will surface via web pages or embedded links within email or other messaging platforms. Browser-based attacks can be largely and successfully mitigated by installing a good Content and Ad-blocking product. One of the most respected within the Apple App Store - designed for iPad, iPhone and Mac - is 1Blocker for Safari.

https://apps.apple.com/gb/app/1blocker-for-safari/id1365531024


1Blocker is highly configurable - and crucially does not rely upon an external proxy-service of dubious provenance, often utilised by so-called AntiVirus products intended for iOS/iPadOS. Instead, all processing by 1Blocker takes place on your device - and contrary to expectations, Safari will run faster and more efficiently.


Unwanted content is not simply filtered after download (a technique used by basic/inferior products), but instead undesirable embedded content is blocked from download. The 1Blocker product has also recently introduced its new “Firewall” functions - that are explicitly designed to block “trackers”. Being implemented at the network-layer, this additional protection works across all Apps. Recent updates to 1Blocker has introduced additional network extensions, extending protection to other Apps.


A further to improve protection from exploits is to use a security focussed DNS Service in preference to automatic DNS settings. This can either be set on a per-device basis in Settings, or can be set-up on your home Router - and in so doing extends the benefit of this specific protection to other devices on your local network. I suggest using one of the following DNS services - for which IPv4 and IPv6 server addresses are listed:


Quad9 (recommended)


9.9.9.9

149.112.112.112

2620:fe::fe

2620:fe::9



OpenDNS


208.67.222.222

208.67.220.220

2620:119:35::35

2620:119:53::53



Cloudflare


1.1.1.1

1.0.0.1

2606:4700:4700::1111

2606:4700:4700::1001



Security focused DNS providers intentionally "sink hole" known bad or malicious websites and resources - this providing an additional layer of protection beyond that provided by your device and its Operating System. These DNS services will, when used alongside 1Blocker or other reputable Content Blocker, provide defence in depth.


There are advanced techniques to further “harden” iOS/iPadOS (such as using DoH, DoT and DNSSEC). Apple has introduced its new Private Relay to its iCloud+ subscribers - in part employing ODoH (a variant of DoH) as an element of this new functionality. If you have subscribed to iCloud+, and have a device capable of running iOS/iPadOS 15.x or later, this feature is included. 



3 replies
Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Oct 20, 2025 5:55 AM in response to RuffSeas

There are no true Antivirus Products available for iOS/iPadOS. Those that claim to provide AV protection are little more than “snake oil”, have negligible if any tangible benefit - and for Apple devices should generally be avoided. Very often, Apps of this nature introduce more issues than substantive benefit or functionality.


Unlike traditional Operating Systems with which you may be familiar, iOS/iPadOS uses a sandboxed security architecture. As such, Apps cannot access any data outside of their own sandbox - and cannot access the storage and resources of other Apps. As such, it is impossible for an Anti-Virus App to scan the filesystem.


Apps of this type should be removed from the device - and a force-restart performed.


Remove or delete apps from iPad - Apple Support

Force restart iPad - Apple Support


In some instances, it may be necessary to restore the iPad to factory settings - as, ultimately, you appear to have done:

Restore your iPhone, iPad, or iPod to factory settings using a computer - Apple Support



Providing that your iPad has been kept up-to-date with system software updates, you should not be overly concerned for your iPad being directly compromised by malware. Due to the system architecture of iOS/iPadOS, unless jailbroken, your iPad is not susceptible to traditional malware infection per-se. However, as with all computer systems, there are still vulnerabilities and exploits to which you remain vulnerable.


For older devices, no longer benefiting from regular security updates, the risk of an unpatched vulnerability being exploited increases. Regardless of the installed version of iPadOS, there are useful mitigations that can be used to significantly reduce your exposure to risk.



Threat Mitigation


Other than malicious websites that will attempt to capture information that you willingly enter, the majority of threats to which you will be invariably exposed will surface via web pages or embedded links within email or other messaging platforms. Browser-based attacks can be largely and successfully mitigated by installing a good Content and Ad-blocking product. One of the most respected within the Apple App Store - designed for iPad, iPhone and Mac - is 1Blocker for Safari.

https://apps.apple.com/gb/app/1blocker-for-safari/id1365531024


1Blocker is highly configurable - and crucially does not rely upon an external proxy-service of dubious provenance, often utilised by so-called AntiVirus products intended for iOS/iPadOS. Instead, all processing by 1Blocker takes place on your device - and contrary to expectations, Safari will run faster and more efficiently.


Unwanted content is not simply filtered after download (a technique used by basic/inferior products), but instead undesirable embedded content is blocked from download. The 1Blocker product has also recently introduced its new “Firewall” functions - that are explicitly designed to block “trackers”. Being implemented at the network-layer, this additional protection works across all Apps. Recent updates to 1Blocker has introduced additional network extensions, extending protection to other Apps.


A further to improve protection from exploits is to use a security focussed DNS Service in preference to automatic DNS settings. This can either be set on a per-device basis in Settings, or can be set-up on your home Router - and in so doing extends the benefit of this specific protection to other devices on your local network. I suggest using one of the following DNS services - for which IPv4 and IPv6 server addresses are listed:


Quad9 (recommended)


9.9.9.9

149.112.112.112

2620:fe::fe

2620:fe::9



OpenDNS


208.67.222.222

208.67.220.220

2620:119:35::35

2620:119:53::53



Cloudflare


1.1.1.1

1.0.0.1

2606:4700:4700::1111

2606:4700:4700::1001



Security focused DNS providers intentionally "sink hole" known bad or malicious websites and resources - this providing an additional layer of protection beyond that provided by your device and its Operating System. These DNS services will, when used alongside 1Blocker or other reputable Content Blocker, provide defence in depth.


There are advanced techniques to further “harden” iOS/iPadOS (such as using DoH, DoT and DNSSEC). Apple has introduced its new Private Relay to its iCloud+ subscribers - in part employing ODoH (a variant of DoH) as an element of this new functionality. If you have subscribed to iCloud+, and have a device capable of running iOS/iPadOS 15.x or later, this feature is included. 



Nov 1, 2025 9:16 AM in response to RuffSeas

Don’t load add-on security apps.


They mess with routing, they mess with routing and communications, did I mention they mess with routing, and too many of the add-ons siphon off data or metadata.


Too often, the add-on VPN apps are a cesspool, too.


Too much of the add-on security app business looks like the malware business, but with an end-user license agreement.


Outside of configurations requiring end-point security, best avoid the add-on security apps. Use the built-in anti-malware.

Nov 1, 2025 8:09 AM in response to LotusPilot

Thanks for the help! I will definitely be saving this for reference later. I did take the iPad to the Apple Store and they had the same result. I am reasonably sure they didn't have virus barrier on their computers, so I kind of eliminated that as a cause. (couldn't hurt to shut the thing off though!) In my very inexperienced opinion, I figured it was either a bug of some kind or a brewing hardware issue with the iPad. I actually bought a new iPad, plugged into my computer and it did the exact same thing. After some more curse words, I tried to set the new iPad up on my mother's computer and it worked like a charm. At this point, I'm thinking maybe it wasn't a hardware issue after all. But, without the proper diagnostic tools, I'll never know for sure!


I am sure, however, that after all of this, I am definitely going to need a large bowl of chocolate ice cream.

Unbricking my bricked iPad

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