|
|
|
|
|
by Moter8
3174 days ago
|
|
Cellebrite got into that phone. A presenter from the firm told us so. Apparently 300 devs work fulltime on mobile devices in Isreal to develop iOS/Android exploits, mostly for Law Enforcement or despots. He talked quite a bit about what you can get off the devices, but not much on the how to get into there. Apparently Android-encrypted phones are the safest though. They didn't have an exploit for them 2 months ago. |
|
That's odd. I guess the implication is that iPhone hsm is broken (or they can get past a short pin via an exploit that allows brute forcing - typically an hsm should (be possible to configure to) permanently destroy the keys after N attempts).
I suppose it demonstrates that secure encryption requires the user to memorise something equivalent of 96-128 bits of entropy, that will be used for key derivation.
[ed: i suppose it's conceivable that there's an attack against how the iPhone generates symmetric encryption keys, but I would guess that's less likely]