FBI Director Wray leads off the DOJ's backdooring encryption conference saying we'll hear a number of stories today about child exploitation. He then praises Facebook for maintaining visibility on users. It appears we're being set up for a day-long emotional appeal to Facebook.
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Wray says he gets frustrated when people say we're trying to weaken encryption. And he says he doesn't want a backdoor (which he then defines as a way to look at data without a warrant.)
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Wray says he's been hearing from experts that there are ways to solve the encryption debate safely. Those experts, interestingly, are not part of this summit.
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Replying to @JoeUchill @matthew_d_green
And key: the only solution that any expert has proposed is the data at rest, where you can risk-balance things by first requiring physical access to the device, build in timelocks and auto-bricking to prevent evil maid attacks, etc...
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Replying to @ncweaver @JoeUchill
Auto bricking made more sense before the Apple and Google bootroms both got so thoroughly owned that your local cops can pick up an “exploit in a box”.
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Replying to @matthew_d_green @JoeUchill
You can auto-brick with hardware paths, so pwning the secure enclave isn't sufficient to prevent the auto-brick.
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Replying to @ncweaver @JoeUchill
What part of the thing detects the access and activates this bricking fuse?
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The Really Secure Super Enclave!
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Replying to @Pinboard @matthew_d_green and
... this time we mean it! Watch Rocky!
0 replies 0 retweets 1 likeThanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
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