barmar, on 2016-March-30, 09:45, said:
No one knowledgeable ever thought that the government (or others) couldn't hack into a phone if they really wanted to, it's just a matter of how easy it is. It's like locks on houses -- no one doubts that most cops know how to pick locks, but we still wouldn't just give them a skeleton key for all locks.
Also, the software is designed to wipe the phone if it detects too many failed attempts, so they risk the possibility of completely destroying the evidence while trying to get it. They were looking for an easy, safer way to get into it.
I want to make sure I understand what you are saying.There has been much talk these days as to how terrorist cells can "go dark". It has been said that secure communication among terrorists and, for that matter, other criminals, is making prevention and apprehension more difficult. Are you saying this is all hokum, the feds can get into everything, no problem? Is it really the general view of encryption experts that secure encrypted communication is a myth?
I am not knowledgeable. Not even semi. But I go back to a point I made earlier. If the feds could easily have cracked into the phone, I would have expected them to shut up about having it, gotten a warrant to get into it (much like the unpublicized wiretap warrants of yesterdays), gone into the phone and read the contents, and acted quickly on that knowledge. The fact that they did not do so lends credence, at least for me, to the idea that initially they were unable to do so. I am having trouble seeing the flaw in this logic.
Added: It seems unlikely to me that anyone, outside of a very few, knows exactly what the government capacity is. The problem in this case was not just the encryption. There were, or at least they assumed that there were, tripwires. Clumsy attempts to get in would trigger an erasure, and perhaps it was time-sensitive so that if the data was not accessed within a certain period it would be erased even if no other wire was tripped. So the problem was to get into the phone quickly without triggering an erasure. I don't know and I seriously doubt that anyone outside of a small circle knows if they could, but certainly the simplest explanation for why they didn't is that they lacked the ability to do it.