I just don't understand. If there really is $236M on the line then services of any company that could unlock it would be worth any asking price. I'm sure there exists someone willing to take the challenge for a big enough slice of it. There's cybersecurity companies everywhere.
Maybe let me put it this way - he has basically unlimited money to do this. At that "price point" you could hire the best specialists in the world to crack this.
IDK, maybe ironkey is just really secure. I knew someone who worked at a nuclear research facility for a major defense contractor and they used them. If the US gave them the green light I bet you they had the NSA poke at it.
Sure, but there are companies like the Israeli NSO which apparently has cracked the uncrackable iPhone secure enclave, I can't believe that for the right amount of money they wouldn't take a stab at it, or at least try to figure out a way to have unlimited password tries for this guy. Idk, maybe I'm being naive.
Well, to be clear, they'd be working on contingency. Unless this guy is otherwise wealthy, he probably won't have a million dollars laying around to give them.
I wouldn't hold my breath on companies willing to work on contingency to break a piece of crypto the US government uses. Not that the government is particularly competent at this, but it's a reasonable bar. Plus there will almost certainly be legal issues stemming from cracking devices the government uses.
I remember when Bitcoin first blew up (price reached a few hundred I think?) everyone I knew claimed that they bought a bunch at a few cents but forgot the password/reformatted their hard drive/gave it away.
Maybe let me put it this way - he has basically unlimited money to do this. At that "price point" you could hire the best specialists in the world to crack this.