Cydia, an application that allows iOS users to install software on jailbroken phones, may be on the way to the iOS 7 operating system.

Although there have been some complaints with iOS 7 ever since its released in the mobile operating world, it is clearly inevitable that people will eventually be forced to make the switch if everyone wants to stick with the iPhone. Although the iOS 6 operating system provided some more ability for hackers to jailbreak phones, they are now turning to iOS 7 to crack the code.

In the meantime, a jailbreak developer by the name of Cjori is apparently trying to port Cydia to iOS 7 and Redman Pie has explained this process.

"Cjori told Redmond Pie that he used OpenSn0w to tether-jailbreak iOS 7 on A4 based iPhone 4. Cydia was recompiled from source with the iOS 7 SDK and he manually debugged all of the issues encountered using various UNIX tools."

A Screenshot of what Cydia might look like has been posted at appadvice.com, with a title that reads "Who are you?"

"Not all of the packages available via Cydia are designed to be used by all users. Please categorize yourself so that Cydia can apply helpful filters," the text reads on the screenshot.

@planetbeing had continued to tweet that they are working on a jailbreak for the iOS 7 and hopefully the newer iPhones, which are becoming increasingly difficult to jailbreak thanks to Apple's security efforts.

In a tweet earlier this month, @pod2g said, @planetbeing the road is long though. Assembling all the pieces may take a while... Don't expect a jailbreak next week people ;)