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LiberalArkie

(15,716 posts)
Thu Mar 3, 2016, 12:38 PM Mar 2016

The irony in the FBI's request to unlock the iPhone

If the FBI wins its court battle to force Apple to unlock an iPhone used by one of the assailants in the San Bernardino terrorist attacks, the result could be a massive security hole that would affect many federal agencies.

Apple continues to oppose a California judge's order to unlock security features on the iPhone used by Syed Rizwan Farook.

The FBI has argued that it only wants the data from one iPhone. Apple contends that it would have to write software that could potentially unlock any iPhone, thereby threatening the privacy of anyone who owns the smartphone.

What has largely gone unreported in the controversy, however, is that the federal government over the past four years has largely shifted its use of mobile devices from Blackberry to iPhones. The reason? The iPhone's strong, native passcode security.


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http://www.computerworld.com/article/3040355/data-privacy/the-irony-in-the-fbis-request-to-unlock-the-iphone.html
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The irony in the FBI's request to unlock the iPhone (Original Post) LiberalArkie Mar 2016 OP
They should give that phone to the kids on NCIS. They would crack the case in 60 minutes. TeamPooka Mar 2016 #1
If they had not intentionally reset the iCloud password, it would have been LiberalArkie Mar 2016 #2

LiberalArkie

(15,716 posts)
2. If they had not intentionally reset the iCloud password, it would have been
Thu Mar 3, 2016, 01:31 PM
Mar 2016

relatively easy too open. They deliberately locked it up. The NSA could have opened it and still could at any time.

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