Arjun grabbed the Python source of the bypass tool. He traced the handshake function:
[INFO] Device connected: MediaTek USB Port (COM5) [INFO] Sending handshake (modified sequence)... [INFO] Handshake successful! [INFO] Bypassing SLA/DAA... [INFO] Exploit sent. Device ready for flash. Arjun exhaled. The phone’s screen stayed black—but in SP Flash Tool, the memory regions were now visible. He flashed the stock firmware, and ten minutes later, the Infinix logo glowed white. mtk bypass tool handshaking error
The next morning, three people had already thanked him. One of them was from a small repair shop in Karachi who’d been stuck on the same error for two weeks. Arjun grabbed the Python source of the bypass tool
“Not again,” he muttered. Two hours earlier, things had seemed simple. His friend’s phone had the infamous “DA (Download Agent) mismatch” after a failed OTA update. Arjun had used the MTK Bypass Tool before—it exploited the brom (bootrom) mode before security patches killed the vulnerability. But this time, the phone’s firmware was newer. The handshake protocol expected a specific response from the preloader, and the tool’s patched libusb wasn’t aligning. [INFO] Bypassing SLA/DAA
It was 11:47 PM when Arjun’s screen flickered with the dreaded red text:
Every attempt ended the same: