Cydia lovers and iPhone hackers are eager for a working iOS 9.3 jailbreak, and rumors have the release date from either Taig or Pangu coming before Apple's Worldwide Developer Conference this year (WWDC 2016).

Even if that's true, and that's a big "if," here are the reasons you should wait.

Apple iOS 9.3.2 Beta 3 Released 

The Cupertino giant is now releasing new versions of iOS 9.3 faster than jailbreakers can find ways to hack into the system, and the latest update happened just this week.

As Apple Insider recently reported, Apple seeded a new version of the iOS 9.3.2 beta to developers and beta testers this week. It's the third beta of iOS 9.3.2 and it's actually really good news -- if you're not looking for a jailbreak, that is.

The iOS 9.3.2 beta 3 reportedly fixes what's become known as the "White Screen of Death" that users experienced when trying to play some games with Game Center integration on their iPhones. The bug caused the games to crash and show a blank white screen, hence the dramatic term.

The new version of iOS 9.3.2 also includes the return of the ability to run Night Shift and Low Power Mode at the same time, along with other minor bug fixes.

Apple iOS 10 Coming Soon

As WWDC 2016 fast approaches, the Apple community is expected to get a preview of the next big version of Apple's mobile operating system, iOS 10.

It won't be available immediately, of course, but given that Apple has confirmed it will continue updating iOS 9.3 at pace until the (presumed) September 2016 public release of iOS 10, there's not much hope for an up-to-date iOS 9.3 jailbreak -- and certainly not if you allow the official updates to run as they're released.

Fake iOS 9.x Jailbreaks Abound

The last reason to be patient on the next jailbreak is that there are plenty of people looking to hack your iPhone (and not in the good way) with fake jailbreaks for iOS 9.2, iOS 9.3, iOS 9.3.2 -- you name it.

Plenty of reports have Pangu and TaiG both still working on an iOS 9 jailbreak, so have a little faith in your favorite (trusted) hackers, and wait until they figure it out.