When the FBI revealed it was able to hack into an iPhone used
by one of the terrorists involved in the 2015 mass shooting in San
Bernardino, Calif., people wanted to know just how the agency did it.
In fact, three news organizations sued the FBI
in September for just this information. And because of that lawsuit,
the agency released 100 pages of documents on Friday. The problem is
they're heavily censored, according to the Associated Press.
The
documents don't reveal who the FBI hired to hack into the phone or how
much it paid that vendor. The FBI labeled those files "secret" before
they were released.
The iPhone was at the center of a legal back-and-forth
between the government and Apple last year after the December 2015
attack that left 14 people dead. The government wanted Apple to write
new software that would unlock the phone and make its data readable.
Apple refused, saying that weakening the encryption would potentially
leave other iPhone users at risk.
In a surprise revelation
last March, the Department of Justice said an unnamed outside party
helped agents break into an iPhone 5C that was used by shooter Syed
Farook. However, the agency wouldn't disclose how the hacker got into
the phone.
The lawsuit against the FBI was filed by the Associated
Press, Vice and Gannett, the parent of national newspaper USA Today.
The three news organizations sought details about the hacker the FBI
used and associated costs. The FBI reportedly refused to provide that
information to the organizations under the Freedom of Information Act.
In
the lawsuit complaint, the news organizations argued the public has a
right to know how the government spent taxpayer funds to obtain the
hacking technique. They also argued the existence of a secret flaw in
the iPhone could leave the public in danger.
While the most
critical information remains unknown, the FBI's released documents do
reveal that the agency received three submissions from companies to hack
into the phone and that it signed a nondisclosure agreement with the
vendor it choose, according to the Associated Press.
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