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  1. #1
    Senior Member JohnDoe2's Avatar
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    FBI may have found way to unlock San Bernardino attacker's iPhone

    FBI may have found way to unlock San Bernardino attacker's iPhone

    Published March 21, 2016 Associated Press


    NOW PLAYINGFBI vs. Apple feud in focus after terror suspects captured
    LOS ANGELES – Federal authorities have asked to hold off on a much-anticipated court hearing set for Tuesday over the FBI's demand for Apple to help unlock an encrypted iPhone used by one of the San Bernardino attackers.

    In a filing late Monday, federal prosecutors said "an outside party" has come forward and shown the FBI a possible method for unlocking the phone used by one of the shooters in the Dec. 2 terror attack.


    Authorities say they need time to determine if the method will work without compromising data on the phone.


    If the method works, the government said, it would eliminate the need for Apple's assistance. Apple has fought the court order, saying the government's demand for assistance would make other iPhones vulnerable.


    In a statement, U.S. Justice Department spokeswoman Melanie Newman says the government is "cautiously optimistic" that the possible method will work.

    http://www.foxnews.com/tech/2016/03/...rs-iphone.html
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  2. #2
    Senior Member JohnDoe2's Avatar
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    How the FBI might hack into an iPhone without Apple’s help

    By The Associated Press -

    NEW YORK — For more than a month, federal investigators have insisted they have no alternative but to force Apple to help them open up a phone used by one of the San Bernardino shooters.

    That changed Monday when the Justice Department said an “outside party” recently showed the FBI a different way to access the data on the phone used by Syed Farook, who with his wife killed 14 people in the Dec. 2 attack.


    The magistrate judge in the case postponed a hearing scheduled for Tuesday and gave the government two weeks to test its method. But federal officials have been mum about who came forward and what method they’ve proposed. Here are some of the leading options outside experts think the FBI might be exploring.


    BACK UP AND ATTACK
    One likely scenario involves making multiple copies of the iPhone’s flash memory, which investigators could use to restore the phone’s data should they inadvertently trigger the phone’s “self-destruct” feature by making too many wrong guesses at the passcode.

    That feature doesn’t actually erase all the files on the iPhone. Instead, it erases a section of the iPhone’s memory that contains one of the keys necessary to unlock the data on the phone. This section, known as the “effaceable storage,” sits in a memory chip that theoretically could be removed and plugged into a reader device that’s capable of electronically copying what’s stored on the chip — and then replacing the data if it’s been erased.


    While the technique hasn’t been proven for this purpose, forensic expert Jonathan Zdziarski said it was demonstrated in a widely circulated video that shows a Chinese smartphone vendor using a similar procedure to install more memory capacity on an iPhone. FBI Director James Comey was asked about the technique during a congressional hearing on March 1, but Comey didn’t say directly whether the FBI had considered the approach.


    RESET THE COUNT
    A more nuanced approach would involve isolating the portion of the phone’s memory where the count of how many passcode attempts have been made is stored, said Ajay Arora, CEO and co-founder of Vera, an encryption software company.

    In theory, the person working on the phone would then be able to reset the count each time it approached 10, allowing investigators to make an infinite number of guesses.


    “This is more technical and a little more difficult, because you’d have to isolate the section,” he said. Apple hasn’t provided any maps to show where that data is stored. The main problem: The FBI would run the risk of losing information if something went wrong.


    Shane McGee, chief privacy officer at the FireEye cybersecurity firm, agreed that this kind of approach could potentially work.

    “All the government really needs is the opportunity to do a very simple, brute-force attack,” he said.


    DE-CAPPING
    Another approach, sometimes known as “chip de-capping,” calls for physically removing the casing of the iPhone’s processor chip, using acid or a laser drill.

    In theory, investigators could then connect electronic probes capable of reading the phone’s unique identification code bit by bit from the location where it is “fused” into the phone’s hardware. This method would also have to read the algorithm that combines that code with the user passcode to unlock the phone.


    Once they get that information, investigators could then load it onto another computer, where they can run thousands of attempts at guessing the passcode without worrying about triggering the auto-erase function on the phone itself.


    Forensic investigators have used similar procedures to read other kinds of data from computer chips, according to McGee. But experts say the process of physically dismantling a chip is technically demanding and has a high risk of causing damage that would make the data unreadable.



    A BRAND NEW ‘ZERO DAY’
    Even a tiny flaw unknown to the software’s creator — known as a zero-day vulnerability — could potentially give the government, or someone else, a way in, said Jay Kaplan, CEO of Synack and an a former NSA counterterrorism researcher.
    Those exploits are considered valuable to hackers, who often sell them to others, and to intelligence agencies that use them for gathering data. It isn’t clear if the government would share the information with Apple — which might then try to fix the vulnerability — or if the government would try to keep the information “in its back pocket” so it can be used for future cases, Kaplan said.

    While in theory it’s possible that investigators could go with some kind of brute-force attack, Kaplan thinks it’s more likely that the FBI’s mystery assistant found a zero day instead.


    “There’s plenty of them out there that vendors don’t know about,” Kaplan said.

    “Regardless of the method, it’s going to be a pretty complex process, whether it involves a zero day or not. I’m sure a lot of really smart people are working on the problem.”

    http://www.bcdemocrat.com/2016/03/22...cking-methods/

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    Senior Member JohnDoe2's Avatar
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    Last edited by JohnDoe2; 03-28-2016 at 06:14 PM.
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