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Apple at BlackHat: Reopening the "Going Dark" Debate (Lawfare)



Just over a week ago, at the BlackHat hacker convention in Las Vegas,
Ivan KrstiÄ?, Head of Security Engineering and Architecture at Apple gave
a talk entitled â??Behind the scenes of iOS Security,â?? the slides of which
are available here.

Itâ??s a historic talk for a couple of reasons. First, Apple is
traditionally very secretive about how it technically does security on
its devices. Apple also announced its first bug bounty program. So far,
so newsworthy.

But something else happened at that talk. Unbeknownst to the presenter
or anybody in the audience, Apple just reopened the â??Going Darkâ?? dispute
between the FBI and the privacy community, and it turned the entire
dispute on its head. In the cold light of day, I suspect Apple, the US
government, and privacy activists are going to be rather unhappy when
they digest the sobering implications of the talk, though they will
likely be upset for entirely different reasons.

In short, Apple built the very thing that they and the privacy community
have been saying for years is reckless, dangerous or impossible: a
high-value encryption key secured in a vault such that the key canâ??t be
stolen or misused by hackers or malicious insiders. And without a hint
of self-awareness Appleâ??s head of security engineering and architecture
went all the way to BlackHat in Las Vegas to boast about how they did it.

But Iâ??m getting ahead of myself. Letâ??s start at the beginning...

https://lawfareblog.com/apple-blackhat-reopening-going-dark-debate