Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Apple
  4. Mobile
  5. News

Cellebrite may be third party offering to crack San Bernardino shooter’s iPhone

Add as a preferred source on Google

After the showdown between Apple and the FBI was resulted in a postponement, there was a scramble to find out which “third party” was offering the government a way to crack the San Bernardino shooter’s iPhone — and according to Israeli newspaper Yedioth Ahronoth, it’s Israeli firm Cellebrite.

On March 21, U.S. Magistrate Judge Sheri Pym had a conference call with Apple’s lawyers and representatives for the United States. The conversation involved Apple trying to convince the judge to vacate the court order that compelled it to offer a backdoor into the iPhone of the shooter that killed 14 people in San Bernardino last December. The FBI moved to postpone the hearing after it learned of another possible way to get into the iPhone without Apple’s help at all.

Recommended Videos

“There have been a lot of people who have reached out to us during this litigation with proposed alternate methods, and one by one they have failed for one reason or the other,” said Tracy Wilkinson, a representative for the U.S. “And we haven’t, you know, — there’s just no reason to go into those. But at this point we have, at least, a good faith basis that it will work. The problem is we don’t know for sure.”

As the FBI isn’t 100 percent sure the method, reportedly proposed by Cellebrite, will work, it requested that the court postpone the hearing. The judge agreed and requested a status update from the FBI on April 5 — giving the FBI ample time to test the alternate method.

The Cupertino company contended that the government’s argument was based on its assertion that it had “explored other means … [and] had been unable to identify any other methods feasible for gaining access.” Since the FBI now says they have an alternate method, Apple contends that the court should vacate the order since there’s no “good cause” anymore. But the court sided with the FBI.

Cellebrite has been working with “intelligence, defense, and law enforcement” for many years, according to Yedioth Ahronoth, which cited anonymous industry officials. The newspaper reports that the company began providing decryption technology to the FBI after it signed a contract in 2013.

The company decrypts information from mobile devices for criminal and intelligence investigations, according to its website. Cellebrite said they were unable to provide comment.

Julian Chokkattu
Former Mobile and Wearables Editor
Julian is the mobile and wearables editor at Digital Trends, covering smartphones, fitness trackers, smartwatches, and more…
Xteink X4 review: I doubted this tiny e-reader, but it fixed my poor screen habits
What can a card-sized e-reader add to your life? Reading bliss, if you ask me.
Xteink X4 ereader in black.

View at Xteink

Quick Review

Read more
Ever wonder what data your iPhone apps are harvesting? This app exposes it all in detail
This iPhone app shows the creepy data your apps can quietly read
Apple iPhone in Hand Use

Apple heavily advertises privacy for its products, like the iPhone. These are usually one of the big talking points in their announcements, which makes your iPhone feel pretty locked down. This is true until you see how much ordinary device data apps can quietly read.

Security research team Mysk has launched Loupe: What Apps Can See, a free iOS app designed to show users what information third-party apps can access through public iOS APIs. The app is available on the App Store for iPhone and iPad, listed under Developer Tools, and requires iOS 17 or later.

Read more
What if Pokémon Go were real life? This app lets you log every animal you see in the real world
Spot it, snap it, collect it. Your neighborhood just became a creature index.
Gotcha app on iPhone

Pokémon Go became all the rage when it launched, as it fulfilled one of our childhood promises,You've "Gotta catch 'em all!." At its peak, that game had a monthly player base of about 200 million, which is astounding. 

Now, a new iOS app called Gotcha wants to do the same, with the difference being that you are catching real animals instead of Pokémon. The concept is simple and addictive. You point your phone at any creature, be it a pigeon or stray cat, and Gotcha cuts it out from the background, identifies what it is, and adds it to your personal collection. 

Read more