The hacker claims to have stolen the content from a remote Cellebrite server. Even though it was encrypted to protect the company, the hacker was able to bypass this protection. Most of the files posted started with UFED (which is an acronym used by Cellebrite for its "Universal Forensic Extraction Device") followed with the name of a smartphone manufacturer such as Samsung, or BlackBerry.
According to forensic scientist Jonathan Zdziarski, some of the files revealed that parts of Cellebrite's machines use methods to unlock iOS devices that were c reated by the jailbraking community. Zdziarski says that if Cellebrite used these community-devised tools, it would mean that the company's scientific products actually contain "forensically unsound and experimental software."
Cellebrite has released a statement claiming that no source code has been released by the hacker. "The files referenced here are part of the distribution package of our application and are available to our customers." Cellebrite added that it often monitors the latest research which includes "newly published forensic methods, research tools and publicly documented issues, including "jailbreaks," which enable platform research."
The company was rumored to have helped the FBI unloc k the Apple iPhone 5c belonging to deceased terrorist Sayed Farook.
source: Motherboard via MacRumors
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