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Apple Unlocked iPhones for the Feds 70 Times Before
http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2016/02/17/apple-unlocked-iphones-for-the-feds-70-times-before.html ^

Posted on 02/17/2016 9:04:36 PM PST by TigerClaws

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To: Swordmaker

She may have overstepped her authority. The courts will probably weigh in on that soon.

Cook adopted a strategy that he should have known would come to this. I understand the anger toward, and distrust of, the government.

Did it ever occur to Cook that he was making a product that terrorists would covet like GOLD because it can keep their networks communications secured? I thought about that as soon as he announced it.


201 posted on 02/18/2016 5:04:29 PM PST by Bryan24 (When in doubt, move to the right..........)
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To: arthurus
"Tim Cook is protecting his idol."

You are so, so close...

202 posted on 02/18/2016 6:03:33 PM PST by StAnDeliver ("Sweet, sweet tears ..")
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To: Swordmaker
If the key is gone, effectively so is the data.

I knew that.

Yes, the data on iCloud is encrypted with the same Key.

I did not know that, thanks for the info.

But since the owner is dead, and only he knows the passcode, there is no way to re-create the key.

Right, or more specifically no way to extract it from the HW where it is stored.

203 posted on 02/18/2016 6:24:51 PM PST by palmer (Net "neutrality" = Obama turning the internet over to foreign enemies)
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To: palmer
Right, or more specifically no way to extract it from the HW where it is stored.

Actually the key is not stored in the Hardware. That's one of the reasons the iPhone IS so secure. What is stored on the hardware is a one-way HASH code that represents the passcode.

When the user inputs his passcode, a hidden (hard coded in silicon on later model iPhones) algorithm re-creates that one-way HASH and the new HASH is compared to the one stored on the device. If they are the same, the device is unlocked and start-up continues. The passcode is then passed on to another algorithm and is entangled with the hidden UUID and Group ID along with some hidden data that were collected when the iphone was first started to create the encryption KEY. This is then AGAIN compared to a one-way HASH stored in the Secure Element (on later devices) and if validated, the data the users needs for that session of using the iPhone will be deciphered as needed on the fly, and encrypted as needed when stored. When the iPhone is closed, everything saved is re-encrypted. Then the volatile memory is erased to assure safety of data until the next time the user logs in.

Once the comparisons are made, the passcode is erased and not kept on the device so no current attempt to read it can find it. At no time is the user's passcode ever kept on the device.

204 posted on 02/18/2016 6:37:58 PM PST by Swordmaker (This tag line is a Microsoft insult free zone... but if the insults to Mac users continue....)
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To: Swordmaker; TigerClaws

No one laughs at jokes anymore.


205 posted on 02/18/2016 11:07:55 PM PST by Read Write Repeat (Battleborn)
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