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Cops Around the Country Can Now Unlock iPhones, Records Show (vice.com)

Law enforcement agencies across the country have purchased GrayKey, a relatively cheap tool for bypassing the encryption on iPhones, while the FBI pushes again for encryption backdoors, Motherboard reported on Thursday. From the report: FBI Director Christopher Wray recently said that law enforcement agencies are "increasingly unable to access" evidence stored on encrypted devices. Wray is not telling the whole truth. Police forces and federal agencies around the country have bought relatively cheap tools to unlock up-to-date iPhones and bypass their encryption, according to a Motherboard investigation based on several caches of internal agency documents, online records, and conversations with law enforcement officials. Many of the documents were obtained by Motherboard using public records requests.

The news highlights the going dark debate, in which law enforcement officials say they cannot access evidence against criminals. But easy access to iPhone hacking tools also hamstrings the FBI's argument for introducing backdoors into consumer devices so authorities can more readily access their contents.

3 of 98 comments (clear)

  1. Re: what is it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    You're wrong. They've managed to get around the 10 limit - and without opening the phone to get at individual hardware components for replacement. The details are extremely secret NDA stuff but they demonstrated they can do it even on 8.

  2. Simple 4-6 digit passcodes. Not complex passcodes by JoeyRox · · Score: 5, Informative

    Based on the quoted time to crack the exploit is likely using brute-force - the purpose of the device is to guess those while also disabling the usual 10-guess iOS limit before the device is locked. However, iOS supports complex passcodes as well, up to at least 90 alphanumeric characters, and these are are unlikely to be cracked.

  3. Re: what is it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    The Secure Enclave responds slower and slower to each unlock request..This is not a user setting. Read the Apple security white paper. Very detailed and enlightening