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FBI Chief Admits 'Mistake' With iPhone in Wake of San Bernardino Attack | |||
2016-03-02 | |||
![]() However, speaking to a House panel, FBI Director James Comey said the Justice Department and Apple would still be caught in a tense legal battle because -- even if the FBI hadn’t erred -- there is “no way we would have gotten everything” from the iPhone. Comey insisted the FBI has an obligation to conduct a complete and “competent” investigation into the attack on Dec. 2, 2015, when Syed Farook and his wife, Tashfeen Malik, killed 14 of Farook’s coworkers and injured 22 others at a work holiday party. “If I didn’t do that, I ought to be fired, honestly,” Comey added. The device at issue was provided to Farook by his employer, the San Bernardino County government. And in the wake of the assault, the FBI asked county officials to remotely reset the password for the Apple iCloud account associated with the device. "Since the iPhone 5C was locked when investigators seized it during the lawful search on December 3rd, a logical next step was to obtain access to iCloud backups for the phone in order to obtain evidence related to the investigation in the days following the attack," the FBI said in a previous statement. But resetting the password “had the effect of eliminating the possibility of an auto-backup," according to the FBI. "Even if the password had not been changed and Apple could have turned on the auto-backup and loaded it to the cloud, there might be information on the phone that would not be accessible without Apple's assistance as required by the All Writs Act order, since the iCloud backup does not contain everything on an iPhone," the FBI said in its statement. "As the government's pleadings [in current litigation] state, the government's objective was, and still is, to extract as much evidence as possible from the phone." A federal judge in California ordered Apple to help the FBI hack into Farook’s phone, but the company is fighting the order. On Monday, a federal judge presiding over a separate criminal case in Brooklyn, New York, sided with Apple, saying federal authorities had no legal authority to compel such assistance from Apple.
Specifically, the FBI and Justice Department want Apple to turn off the feature that erases an iPhone's data after 10 failed attempts to unlock the device, so that investigators can run all possible combinations to break the four-digit passcode on Farook's phone. In his own testimony before the same House panel today, a top Apple executive said the matter was something for Congress -- not a court -- to resolve. And he warned that if Apple is forced to break into Farook’s phone, the code they create could endanger the privacy of people across the world. “Hackers and cyber criminals could use this to wreak havoc on our privacy and personal safety,” Apple’s top lawyer, general counsel Bruce Sewell, told the House panel in prepared remarks. “Should the FBI be allowed to stop Apple, or any company, from offering the American people the safest and most secure product it can make?”
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Posted by:Steve White |
#7 Meanwhile, JOHN MCAFEE: I'll decrypt the San Bernardino phone free of charge so Apple doesn't need to place a back door on its product |
Posted by: Vast Right Wing Conspiracy 2016-03-02 09:47 |
#6 How was data extracted from the cellies of the 9/11 hijackers, the shoe bomber, Nadal Hasan, Tsarnaev bros? Oh wait. |
Posted by: Besoeker 2016-03-02 06:07 |
#5 Most likely, the interesting bits are not the cat pix and selfies on the phone, but rather the call detail records of who called who when. The phone carrier already has this info. |
Posted by: SteveS 2016-03-02 01:12 |
#4 This is not an update. This is a crack . Not needed, dangerous. |
Posted by: newc 2016-03-02 01:10 |
#3 To get a new update on my iPhone or iPad I have to go in and approve the upgrade to be downloaded and installed. Is apple going to *force* the phone to take the update somehow without requiring user approval? Will this be done on all iPhones? |
Posted by: CrazyFool 2016-03-02 00:25 |
#2 If I wanted information off that phone, I would know where to look for such support. The FBI does not know how to get information off a phone they don't need with a Company that is willing to take this to Congress. Apple is correct. FBI got's splanin to do. |
Posted by: newc 2016-03-02 00:17 |
#1 Me thinks someone in this terrorist activity food chain was an FBI "informant" who played the FBI like a bongo drum before pulling the trigger. The FBI is trying to cover their tracks and finger prints on this one. |
Posted by: Sock Puppet of Doom 2016-03-02 00:07 |