FBI Hires Cellebrite To Crack San Bernadino iPhone (reuters.com)
tlhIngan writes: Earlier this week, the FBI asked the court for a continuance so it could do some research into a proposed method of cracking the [iPhone belonging to one of the San Bernardino, California shooters]. It turns out the FBI has contracted Cellebrite for $15,000 to break into the phone. Cellebrite is an Israeli software provider specializing in mobile phone forensics software. If they succeed, it would mean Apple would no longer need to be involved.
apple can pull some DCMA BS and sue them. Now will they be that much of a dick?
The irony is sweet with this one:
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/...
Because to live there you can't be a fucking pussy.
Devices like this have been around for a bit and is one possibility: http://blog.mdsec.co.uk/2015/0...
Help Brendan pay off his student loans
All that bullshit because the FBI wanted to save $15 thousand dollars?
Someone should be fired for such a dramatically bad decision as fighting it out in the court of public opinion, let alone federal court.
excitingthingstodo.blogspot.com
No, actually they don't. You don't see commercial airliners (or military planes for that matter), ships, cars (including EVs), appliances ("durable goods"), semiconductors, mobile phones, or really almost any kind of manufacturing in Israel, except a couple of firearms makers maybe. They do do a lot with IP however; several semiconductor companies have design centers there.
It's true, Israel does have some impressive and unique technologies developed there, compared to its size and its state of security. A lot of their technology is military-oriented, for obvious reasons. They've done an impressive job of building a 1st-world nation (economically speaking) in a small place which used to be nothing special less than a century ago. But "the latest in technology"? No, sorry. They are not self-sufficient in any sense. They can't even make many of the weapons systems that defend them; they buy them from the US (e.g. fighter jets).
Wow, they should of asked for more. They would of had to pay 10 times, at least, that in any sort of legal battle.
Cellebrite will likely reap 100 times that much in new business from the publicity this generates. It's not always about making a quick buck, but about making millions of bucks over the longer term.
One of our competitors trademarked the term "hypothesis". From now on, we will call them "boneheaded ideas".
Chain of custody does not matter in regards to TERRORISM.... and if you are against that then you hate america.
Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
How do you maintain chain of custody of the evidence if you hand it over to a company that's not governed by our laws?
If the Israeli company recovers data that gives them leads to other suspected terrorists, does the FBI have legal authority to pursue those leads when the information was "extracted" by a foreign company and it may or may not be fabricated? The only proof that they have that the information was really on the phone is because this company said so.
There is no need for maintaining a chain of custody unless it will be used as evidence. Since anything from this phone would most likely be used to identify potential suspects or persons of interest what they get is no different than any other tip.
I'm a consultant - I convert gibberish into cash-flow.
How do you maintain chain of custody of the evidence if you hand it over to a company that's not governed by our laws?
That's not a problem, for at least two reasons.
First, chain of custody doesn't matter unless you want to use the information recovered as evidence in a trial. If you just use it to generate leads which you then use to find other suspects and evidence, then it's irrelevant if chain of custody was maintained.
Second, chain of custody is easy to maintain. Location and nationality don't affect chain of custody. What matters is that you have a documented chain and can prove that custody was maintained and access was controlled at each step. Worst case is that employees of the Israeli company may have to fly to the US and testify in court to substantiate the chain of custody, and to explain how they extracted the information. I'm sure the company would be happy to do that if the FBI paid them to (which would be an additional fee).
because we give them billions every year?
...
Because of all the money the US gives to them...you know...instead of upkeep on our infrastructure.
Support your local school shooter, give them your firearms.
You don't see commercial airliners (or military planes for that matter), ships, cars (including EVs), appliances ("durable goods"), semiconductors, mobile phones, or really almost any kind of manufacturing in Israel
That's factually not true. TowerJazz (a top-ten pure-play manufacturer) has two modern fabs in Israel and the almighty #1 (intel) has two more in that country.