Except the phone will wipe itself after 10 wrong tries. The gov does not like strong encryption, because they can't break it without some backdoor method of getting the key. In an 8 character password there are ~256 to the 8th power possible passwords. About 18 quadrillion, so at 9 per second it will take you billions of years... and of course the memory will be wiped on the tenth wrong try.parabelum wrote:Apple is playing dumb, and Feds are playing benevolent.
For Apple, this isn't about privacy as many of their customers phones have been hacked by outside rats. Mine was one of them.
For Feds, this is about control and dominance in the big data spectrum.
Both parties are playing us for stupid.
Apple or Feds could hire a hacker, and with the use of botnet network generating up to 9 password guesses per second, they could have that phone cracked in under 20 minutes.
Again, they play the people for fools.
Notice also how that clerk in Kentucky got jailed for refusing judges order, yet Cook proudly rejects this judges order and nothing happens.
There was an article in the WSJ that said that the 5c can probably be hacked by Apple, but later generations can't. And you can sure bet the software technology already exists to make sure it can never be done again. My understanding is it's already implemented in most recent Android versions. The court may win this one, but next time Apple will be like King Canute ordering the tides back. He shows his courtiers that as powerful as he is only God can order the sea back.