Cellebrite Now Cracks iPhone 6

Cellebrite, a mobile forensics company based in Israel, has admitted it is now able to carry out “lawful unlocking and evidence extraction” from the Apple iPhone 6 and 6 Plus.

This was the admission from the firm’s Forensics Research director Shahar Tal on Twitter.

Cellebrite was at the centre of the furore over the FBI’s attempt to unlock an iPhone last year belonging one of the San Bernardino terrorists, Syed Rizwan Farook, the man was responsible for the San Bernardino, California shootings in December 2015.

FBI Case

After the shootings, the FBI recovered Farook’s iPhone 5C, and asked for Apple’s assistance in unlocking the device.

Apple refused point blank to co-operate with the FBI’s court order over the matter, and CEO Tim Cook robustly defended his company’s stance on encryption. Cook said the FBI’s request to create a new operating system, was the “software equivalent to cancer”.

The FBI had attempted to crack the passcode on Farook’s iPhone, but failed because Apple phone systems have a function that automatically erases the access key and renders the phone “permanently inaccessible” after 10 failed attempts.

At one stage the FBI threatened to bring in a ‘third party’ to unlock the device.

In the end however, the Feds reportedly paid unnamed ‘grey hat’ hackers to crack Farook’s iPhone. It was thought at the time that the FBI had paid the third party hackers at least $1.34m to unlock Farook’s iPhone 5C.

Hacked iPhones

Until now, it was thought that later models of the iPhone were more difficult to crack. But now it seems that more modern Apple devices can be cracked, including the iPhone 6 and 6 Plus. But not the iPhone 6S or iPhone 7.

“Cellebrite’s CAIS now supports lawful unlocking and evidence extraction of iPhone 4S/5/5C/5S/6/6+ devices (via our in-house service only),” tweeted Cellebrite’s Tal.

Cellebrite’s website still only promises “the physical extraction of data” from the iPhone 4S, 5, and 5c.

Last month Cellebrite itself was hacked and it had 900 GB of data stolen from one of its servers, including customer information and technical product data.

Quiz: Think you’re a cyber security whizz?

Tom Jowitt

Tom Jowitt is a leading British tech freelancer and long standing contributor to Silicon UK. He is also a bit of a Lord of the Rings nut...

Recent Posts

Russia Accused Of Cyberattack On Germany’s Ruling Party, Defence Firms

German foreign minister warns Russia will face consequences for “absolutely intolerable” cyberattack on ruling party,…

2 days ago

Alphabet Axes Hundreds Of Staff From ‘Core’ Organisation

Google is reportedly laying off at least 200 staff from its “Core” organisation, including key…

2 days ago

Apple Announces Record Share Buyback, Amid iPhone Sales Decline

Investor appeasement? Apple unveils huge $110 billion share buyback program, as sales of iPhone decline…

2 days ago

Tesla Backs Away From Gigacasting Manufacturing – Report

Tesla retreats from pioneering gigacasting manufacturing process, amid cost cutting and challenges at EV giant

3 days ago

US Urges No AI Control Of Nuclear Weapons

No skynet please. After the US, UK and France pledge human only control of nuclear…

3 days ago