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FBI Couldn't Tell Apple What Hack It Used, Even If It Wanted To (qz.com)

An anonymous reader writes: The US Federal Bureau of Investigation doesn't own the technique used to unlock the San Bernardino iPhone, so it can't reveal the method to Apple even if it wanted to, Reuters reported, citing unnamed White House sources. The Washington Post reported yesterday, citing unnamed sources, that the FBI had paid a hacker a one-time fee to use a piece of hardware that allowed it to access the iPhone 5c belonging to one of the San Bernardino, California assailants. The vendor that supplied the hack is a non-US company, according to Reuters. But according to the Post report, it is not the Israeli firm Cellebrite, which had previously been named. The FBI would require the vendor's cooperation in order to submit the technique it used to Vulnerabilities Equities Process, a mechanism that allows the government to consider whether it should disclose security flaws to manufacturers. It's a move that mirrors Apple's own efforts to create security systems on its phones that even it wouldn't be able to crack, meaning it can't comply with a government order to hand over user data even if it wanted to.

1 of 99 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Nice by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 3, Interesting

    One wonders if they set up a little fake company so they could use some technique buried deep inside the NSA, so they could hide it from court examination. There is no plausible parallel construction lie.

    As the guy is dead, there is no trial, and thus no defense lawyers to force the issue.

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