Agreed,
The question that might draw people to major unanswered question might be what 
suspect’s passcode might have set as, rather a number digit combination or 
consisting of letters and numbers. I still voice towards Apple in this case 
however. If they open up backdoor for one device, Apple is technically breaking 
their own security and privacy commitment themselves. I still think security 
and privacy is like a key to the fortune. 
Seyoon Choi
syc20...@gmail.com
YouTube Video Content Producer
Head of Blindinsider
www.blindinsider.com
Technology news, podcasts, videos and lifestyle for blind and visually impaired

> On Feb 23, 2016, at 6:55 PM, Carter Temm <crtbrai...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> Hi,
> I understand both sides of the case. If the iPhone is set with a complex 
> passcode consisting of letters and numbers, it could take the government up 
> to 100 years to brute-force the passcode, depending on the strength of the 
> key.
> Apple is perfectly capable of this, but they would completely loose the war 
> on security. In my opinion, apple should not give out any of the required 
> resources to make this possible. Because, it would only stay secret for so 
> long. Its just an amount of time before someone finds a hack for it.
>> On Feb 23, 2016, at 5:41 PM, Sabahattin Gucukoglu <listse...@me.com> wrote:
>> 
>> My understanding is that the FBI is asking Apple for the technical 
>> capability to brute-force the key.  That’s all.  The problem with Apple’s 
>> current design is that it is vulnerable to simple firmware substitution.  
>> The assumptions that it makes about the user’s key are all predicated on the 
>> notion that Apple would never replace the firmware.  As we now see, this was 
>> a bad choice.  With FBIos in place, that four-digit or even six-digit key 
>> will be cracked in no time.  Regardless of whether Apple develops it, we now 
>> have positive confirmation that it’s possible.  Quite simply, the iOS remote 
>> wipe, manual entry requirements, and delayed entry are no obstacles to key 
>> recovery.
>> 
>> Or in other words, Apple can (and should!) fix this problem, simply and 
>> effectively, by providing a strength meter for the passcode selection 
>> screen, with the strongest indicator reserved for passphrases that will not 
>> be trivially recovered using firmware substitution, and then force every 
>> user of iOS to select a new passphrase on upgrade.  I have already selected 
>> a nine-character passphrase with uppercase, lowercase, numbers and 
>> punctuation.  With Touch ID, I really don’t feel a thing.
>> 
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