http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2012/03/fbi-android-phone-lock/ By David Kravets Threat Level Wired.com March 14, 2012 Pattern-screen locks on Android phones are secure, apparently so much so that they have stumped the Federal Bureau of Investigation. The bureau claims in federal court documents that forensics experts performed âmultiple attemptsâ to access the contents of a Samsung Exhibit II handset, but failed to unlock the phone. An Android device requires the handsetâs Google e-mail address and its accompanying password to unlock the handset once too many wrong swipes are made. The bureau is seeking that information via a court-approved warrant to Google in order to unlock a suspected San Diego-area prostitution pimpâs mobile phone. (For details on the pimp investigation, check out Ars Technicaâs story on the case.) Locking down a phone is even more important today than ever because smart phones store so much personal information. Whatâs more, many states, including California, grant authorities the right to access a suspectâs mobile phone, without a warrant, upon arrest for any crime. [...] ______________________________________________________________________________ ISSMP, CISSP, and Certified Ethical Hacker training with Expanding Security gives the best training and support. Get a free live class invite weekly. Best program, best price. http://www.ExpandingSecurity.com/PainPillReceived on Thu Mar 15 2012 - 00:22:05 PDT
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.2.0 : Thu Mar 15 2012 - 00:15:46 PDT