It has been a few days since the Federal Government announced that they had managed to violate the iPhone του τρομοκράτη Syed Farook και το FBI συμφώνησε να βοηθήσει ένα εισαγγελέα του Arkansas να ξεκλειδώσει two Apple devices (an iPhone and an iPod) to help prosecute two teenagers accused of murder.
Faulkner County District Attorney Cody Hiland confirmed that the FBI agreed to a request from his office to unlock the two devices. The hacking of the devices has been deemed necessary as the authorities face an impasse in the case involving two teenagers Hunter Drexler (18 years old) and Justin Staton (15 years old) who while there are indications cannot be charged with murder.
The teenagers accused of his murder Robert and Patricia Cogdell at their home in Conway, 30 miles north of Little Rock.
Following the Federal announcement on Monday that they said they successfully managed to break the San Bernardino iPhone, we said the war was not over and there is still a question:
The new security bypass discovered by the FBI could be used in any of the 63 other cases involving Apple devices from services law enforcement?.
Today we seem to have the answer.
Recall that the US Department of Justice, immediately after the announcement of the breakage of the first iPhone said that: the method used to unlock the iPhone of Syed Farook "worked only for this phone," an iPhone 5C with iOS 9.
So far there is no information about the iPhone model or the iOS version of Arkansas devices, but there are certainly serious doubts about the solvency of the statements of the Ministry of Justice.