Apple ups the rhetoric related to this FBI case:
http://www.theverge.com/2016/3/10/1...epartment-of-justice-fbi-smearing-desperation
Read the DoJ's latest motion:
https://www.scribd.com/doc/303739074/Government-Response-to-Apple-Motion#download
The motion notes...
For Apple to build the ordered software, no more than ten employees would be required to work for no more than four weeks, perhaps as little as two weeks and that Apple will be reimbursed for costs.
Contrary to Apple's previous claims, even if “criminals, terrorists, and hackers” somehow infiltrated Apple and stole the software necessary to unlock Farook’s iPhone, the only thing that software could be used to do is unlock Farook’s iPhone. The DoJ points out that any code executed requires Apple's unique signature, something that no one is requesting access to. So even if someone obtained the code Apple developed for Farook's iPhone, it would be impossible to run it on another device.
On this point I do think that there is exposure to Apple should any code developed be obtained illegally. Somewhere when updating phones over the air Apple's unique ID is transmitted, most likely as a hashed signature of the code that is being applied in an update, said signature hash compared to some security trust mechanism on the device itself. This "handshake" in software and hardware guarantees the update to be applied to the phone is valid. Organizations with unlimited resources could potentially mount some attack to spoof that over the air update process, so-called "man in the middle" attacks, as I discussed
here.
Then again, how is this only now a possible concern by Apple? The fact that they perform over the air updates of iPhones, just as does all major mobile phone makers, is no less a risk than what the FBI is asking for now.
Finally, the DOJ's motion notes how in 2009 Apple (and Dell) complied with China's request to use China's own and well-known weak WiFi protocol, WAPI, in order to meet the Chinese government's request to be able to snoop user's communications. Seems Apple's complaints of being
pwned of the US government are a wee bit of overreaching.
AMR