Friday, June 19, 2026
ADVT 
International

FBI continues to debate sharing iPhone hack with Apple

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 Apr, 2016 12:13 PM
  • FBI continues to debate sharing iPhone hack with Apple
WASHINGTON — The FBI has not decided whether to share with Apple Inc. details about how the bureau hacked into an iPhone linked to a California terrorism investigation, the bureau's director says.
 
James Comey discussed the situation during a speech Wednesday evening at Kenyon College in Ohio. He called it a "technological corner case" and said the flaw the FBI exploited in Apple's software works only on a "narrow slice of phones" — the iPhone 5C, running version 9 of Apple's mobile operating system, not on newer or older models.
 
"If we tell Apple, they're going to fix it and we're back where we started," Comey said. "As silly as it may sound, we may end up there. We just haven't decided yet."
 
The Justice Department dropped its legal fight to compel Apple to provide it with specialized software that would allow the FBI to hack into the iPhone, which was issued to San Bernardino county health inspector Syed Farook. Farook and his wife Tashfeen Malik killed 14 people in December; the couple died in a shootout with authorities.
 
The iPhone was found in a vehicle the day after the shooting. Two personal phones were found destroyed so completely the FBI could not recover information from them.
 
U.S. Magistrate Sheri Pym had ordered Apple to provide the FBI with software to help it hack into Farook's work-issued iPhone after the government said only Apple could help authorities access the encrypted and locked iPhone. The order touched off a debate pitting digital privacy rights against national security concerns.
 
Comey told the university audience that the case also inspired a lot of efforts to try to break into the phone — "everybody and his uncle Fred called us with ideas."
 
 
"Someone outside the government, in response to that attention, came up with a solution," Comey said. "One that I am confident will be closely protected and used lawfully and appropriately."
 
The government then "purchased a tool that allows court authorized access to the phone," Comey said. The government has declined to release the identity of the third party that made it possible to access the iPhone in the case.
 
"The FBI is very good at keeping secrets and the people we bought this from — I know a fair amount about them, and I have a high degree of confidence that they're very good at protecting it and their motivations align with ours," Comey said.
 
Comey's comments were the closest hints about whether or what the FBI may do with its knowledge of a vulnerability in Apple's software that could let someone bypass built-in digital locks to access private information. It remains unclear whether or when the FBI may share details about the technique with state or local police agencies or law enforcement offices.
 
The FBI's solution apparently would not help Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance, who told a congressional panel that he has 205 iPhones his investigators can't access data from in criminal investigations. Not one of those phones is an iPhone 5C, according to his office.
 
The encrypted phone in the California case was protected by a passcode that included security protocols: a time delay and self-destruct feature that erased the phone's data after 10 tries. The two features made it impossible for the government to repeatedly and continuously test passcodes.

MORE International ARTICLES

Shooting At Black Church Reopens American History's Dark Part: Obama

Shooting At Black Church Reopens American History's Dark Part: Obama
Shock and anger engulfed America as police nabbed a white young man who killed nine people at a historic black church in Charleston in South Carolina, saying he was there "to shoot black people".

Shooting At Black Church Reopens American History's Dark Part: Obama

Sikh Student Can Join US Army With Beard, Turban, Rules Washington Court

Sikh Student Can Join US Army With Beard, Turban, Rules Washington Court
A Sikh college student will be able to join the US Army, without being forced to cut his hair, shave his beard or stop wearing his turban thanks to a Washington court ruling.

Sikh Student Can Join US Army With Beard, Turban, Rules Washington Court

30,000 Expected At New York's International Yoga Day Celebration

30,000 Expected At New York's International Yoga Day Celebration
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon is to deliver the keynote address at the start of the day's celebrations at the UN headquarters in an open plaza along the East River, India's Permanent Representative Asoke Kumar Mukerji told reporters here Tuesday. 

30,000 Expected At New York's International Yoga Day Celebration

Indian Man, 24,Jailed In Singapore For Molesting Indonesian Maid

Indian Man, 24,Jailed In Singapore For Molesting Indonesian Maid
Palanivel Rajesh, 24, pleaded guilty to molesting the 25-year-old Indonesian domestic worker in the lift of a residential complex in Singapore’s Jurong West area on April 30

Indian Man, 24,Jailed In Singapore For Molesting Indonesian Maid

Top Indian-American Cardiologist Suresh Gadasalli Shot Dead By Friend In Texas

Top Indian-American Cardiologist Suresh Gadasalli Shot Dead By Friend In Texas
Witnesses said 60-year-old Ayyasamy Thangam shot the 53-year-old Gadasalli multiple times on Thursday afternoon, according to an Odessa Police Department news release.

Top Indian-American Cardiologist Suresh Gadasalli Shot Dead By Friend In Texas

Madurai Man's Spicy Success Story In Moscow

Madurai Man's Spicy Success Story In Moscow
At P. Jeevanantham's chain of retail outlets selling Indian spices and other food items in Russia, Russians are his major customers and not Indians.

Madurai Man's Spicy Success Story In Moscow