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Default Apple and the FBI

Unfortunately for Apple, the FBI is doing exactly what I predicted.
They are hacking that phone themselves. The reported exploit is also
what I predicted. They are going to clone the phone so they can just
do a brute force attack on the encryption and roll out another clone
every time it locks. It will be done in software so that is not as
cumbersome as it sounds. I still think this is Kubuki theater. My bet
is they already cracked that phone a month or more ago and were just
trying to lull the terrorists into thinking the I-phone was secure.
Letting news of this hack leak was a mistake.
It is a good thing we did not have this "free press" in WWII or we
would have lost that war.
Imagine a press that believed the public had the right to know when
and where D-Day was going to be and that we had cracked Enigma, JN25
and the Japanese diplomatic code.

We need to have a few secrets
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posted to rec.boats
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First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Jun 2013
Posts: 2,650
Default Apple and the FBI

On Thu, 24 Mar 2016 12:53:58 -0400, wrote:

Unfortunately for Apple, the FBI is doing exactly what I predicted.
They are hacking that phone themselves. The reported exploit is also
what I predicted. They are going to clone the phone so they can just
do a brute force attack on the encryption and roll out another clone
every time it locks. It will be done in software so that is not as
cumbersome as it sounds. I still think this is Kubuki theater. My bet
is they already cracked that phone a month or more ago and were just
trying to lull the terrorists into thinking the I-phone was secure.
Letting news of this hack leak was a mistake.
It is a good thing we did not have this "free press" in WWII or we
would have lost that war.
Imagine a press that believed the public had the right to know when
and where D-Day was going to be and that we had cracked Enigma, JN25
and the Japanese diplomatic code.

We need to have a few secrets


===

The FBI was backed into a corner between a rock and a hard place. The
court of public opinion was solidly on the side of Apple and it was
beginning to look like their legal arguments were losing also. If it
had gone to trial and the FBI lost, a legal precedent would have been
set that would continue to haunt them in the future. In order to
prevent it from going to trial and losing, they needed some sort of
pretext and that's the reason the story of the 3rd party hack was
released. There's a good chance the phone had been cracked already.
  #3   Report Post  
posted to rec.boats
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First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Jul 2007
Posts: 36,387
Default Apple and the FBI

On Thu, 24 Mar 2016 13:51:49 -0400,
wrote:

On Thu, 24 Mar 2016 12:53:58 -0400,
wrote:

Unfortunately for Apple, the FBI is doing exactly what I predicted.
They are hacking that phone themselves. The reported exploit is also
what I predicted. They are going to clone the phone so they can just
do a brute force attack on the encryption and roll out another clone
every time it locks. It will be done in software so that is not as
cumbersome as it sounds. I still think this is Kubuki theater. My bet
is they already cracked that phone a month or more ago and were just
trying to lull the terrorists into thinking the I-phone was secure.
Letting news of this hack leak was a mistake.
It is a good thing we did not have this "free press" in WWII or we
would have lost that war.
Imagine a press that believed the public had the right to know when
and where D-Day was going to be and that we had cracked Enigma, JN25
and the Japanese diplomatic code.

We need to have a few secrets


===

The FBI was backed into a corner between a rock and a hard place. The
court of public opinion was solidly on the side of Apple and it was
beginning to look like their legal arguments were losing also. If it
had gone to trial and the FBI lost, a legal precedent would have been
set that would continue to haunt them in the future. In order to
prevent it from going to trial and losing, they needed some sort of
pretext and that's the reason the story of the 3rd party hack was
released. There's a good chance the phone had been cracked already.


I never bought the idea that those phones were ever that secure if you
have the resources of a government going after it. These are the guys
who can read the bits off of a cut up disk platter.
Reading the chips directly off the phone is trivial and then a brute
force attack is easy. You are not using the Apple software at all so
the ten strikes and you are out is not really an issue.
I actually doubt that the geeks at NSA would have any problem hacking
the phone OS anyway.
The problem for apple is the same thing that they were fighting. Once
they crack this phone, the road map for cracking the next one is
already there but it will be the government who has it, not Apple.
This was a pyrrhic victory for them.
  #4   Report Post  
posted to rec.boats
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First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Mar 2016
Posts: 894
Default Apple and the FBI

wrote:
On Thu, 24 Mar 2016 13:51:49 -0400,
wrote:

On Thu, 24 Mar 2016 12:53:58 -0400,
wrote:

Unfortunately for Apple, the FBI is doing exactly what I predicted.
They are hacking that phone themselves. The reported exploit is also
what I predicted. They are going to clone the phone so they can just
do a brute force attack on the encryption and roll out another clone
every time it locks. It will be done in software so that is not as
cumbersome as it sounds. I still think this is Kubuki theater. My bet
is they already cracked that phone a month or more ago and were just
trying to lull the terrorists into thinking the I-phone was secure.
Letting news of this hack leak was a mistake.
It is a good thing we did not have this "free press" in WWII or we
would have lost that war.
Imagine a press that believed the public had the right to know when
and where D-Day was going to be and that we had cracked Enigma, JN25
and the Japanese diplomatic code.

We need to have a few secrets


===

The FBI was backed into a corner between a rock and a hard place. The
court of public opinion was solidly on the side of Apple and it was
beginning to look like their legal arguments were losing also. If it
had gone to trial and the FBI lost, a legal precedent would have been
set that would continue to haunt them in the future. In order to
prevent it from going to trial and losing, they needed some sort of
pretext and that's the reason the story of the 3rd party hack was
released. There's a good chance the phone had been cracked already.


I never bought the idea that those phones were ever that secure if you
have the resources of a government going after it. These are the guys
who can read the bits off of a cut up disk platter.
Reading the chips directly off the phone is trivial and then a brute
force attack is easy. You are not using the Apple software at all so
the ten strikes and you are out is not really an issue.
I actually doubt that the geeks at NSA would have any problem hacking
the phone OS anyway.
The problem for apple is the same thing that they were fighting. Once
they crack this phone, the road map for cracking the next one is
already there but it will be the government who has it, not Apple.
This was a pyrrhic victory for them.


We sold a bunch of disk drives to the NSA in the 80's. Someone near me
told them they could exchange the HDA if a crash. I informed them, that an
engine boil out tank would dissolve the aluminum. The rep was very happy
with that knowledge.

  #5   Report Post  
posted to rec.boats
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First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Jul 2007
Posts: 36,387
Default Apple and the FBI

On Thu, 24 Mar 2016 15:03:00 -0500, Califbill
wrote:

wrote:
On Thu, 24 Mar 2016 13:51:49 -0400,
wrote:

On Thu, 24 Mar 2016 12:53:58 -0400,
wrote:

Unfortunately for Apple, the FBI is doing exactly what I predicted.
They are hacking that phone themselves. The reported exploit is also
what I predicted. They are going to clone the phone so they can just
do a brute force attack on the encryption and roll out another clone
every time it locks. It will be done in software so that is not as
cumbersome as it sounds. I still think this is Kubuki theater. My bet
is they already cracked that phone a month or more ago and were just
trying to lull the terrorists into thinking the I-phone was secure.
Letting news of this hack leak was a mistake.
It is a good thing we did not have this "free press" in WWII or we
would have lost that war.
Imagine a press that believed the public had the right to know when
and where D-Day was going to be and that we had cracked Enigma, JN25
and the Japanese diplomatic code.

We need to have a few secrets

===

The FBI was backed into a corner between a rock and a hard place. The
court of public opinion was solidly on the side of Apple and it was
beginning to look like their legal arguments were losing also. If it
had gone to trial and the FBI lost, a legal precedent would have been
set that would continue to haunt them in the future. In order to
prevent it from going to trial and losing, they needed some sort of
pretext and that's the reason the story of the 3rd party hack was
released. There's a good chance the phone had been cracked already.


I never bought the idea that those phones were ever that secure if you
have the resources of a government going after it. These are the guys
who can read the bits off of a cut up disk platter.
Reading the chips directly off the phone is trivial and then a brute
force attack is easy. You are not using the Apple software at all so
the ten strikes and you are out is not really an issue.
I actually doubt that the geeks at NSA would have any problem hacking
the phone OS anyway.
The problem for apple is the same thing that they were fighting. Once
they crack this phone, the road map for cracking the next one is
already there but it will be the government who has it, not Apple.
This was a pyrrhic victory for them.


We sold a bunch of disk drives to the NSA in the 80's. Someone near me
told them they could exchange the HDA if a crash. I informed them, that an
engine boil out tank would dissolve the aluminum. The rep was very happy
with that knowledge.


I never heard of an HDA leaving Ft Meade. When they got rid of a disk
drive, the media was missing.
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