Not even Apple can break into your iOS device without your passcode

TECHi's Author Brian Molidor
Opposing Author Reuters Read Source Article
Last Updated Originally published October 21, 2015 · 1:20 AM EDT
Reuters View all Reuters Two Takes by TECHi Read the original story Published October 21, 2015 Updated January 30, 2024
TECHi's Take
Brian Molidor
Brian Molidor
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While Apple has admitted that it could technically help law enforcement break into older iOS devices, any of the devices running on iOS 8 or later, which is more than 90% of them, breaking into them is literally impossible without a passcode, even for Apple. Thanks to the company’s strengthened encryption methods and security measures, not even Apple has the ability to access a device’s data without knowing the user’s passcode, a feature which the company adopted last year after Edward Snowden leaks. 

Reuters

Reuters

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Apple Inc told a U.S. judge that accessing data stored on a locked iPhone would be “impossible” with devices using its latest operating system, but the company has the “technical ability” to help law enforcement unlock older phones. Apple’s position was laid out in a brief filed late Monday, after a federal magistrate judge in Brooklyn, New York, sought its input as he weighed a U.S. Justice Department request to force the company to help authorities access a seized iPhone during an investigation. In court papers, Apple said that for the 90 percent of its devices running iOS 8 or higher, granting the Justice Department’s request “would be impossible to perform” after it strengthened encryption methods. Those devices include a feature that prevents anyone without the device’s passcode from accessing its data, including Apple itself. The feature was adopted in 2014 amid heightened privacy concerns following leaks by former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden about NSA surveillance programs. Apple told U.S. Magistrate Judge James Orenstein it could access the 10 percent of its devices that continue to use older systems, including the one at issue in the case. But it urged the judge to not require it to comply with the Justice Department’s request.

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