this post was submitted on 07 Jul 2025
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Cybersecurity - Memes
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fun fact, in the UK the offence is “failing to decrypt the device when required to do so” making these measures quite dangerous.
That said, unless you are being charged under a national security crime, the maximum sentence for “failing to decrypt the device when required to do so” is up to two years, so the game’s the game.
I wonder how they'd look at it if previous cracking attempts wiped the device. Is that "failure" to unlock punishable or not? The phone was wiped already - the user can't unlock it even if he wanted to.
Similarily, is it possible to make it impossible to prove the device was wiped due to the PIN and not beforehand?
I had the same question. The best would be to consult a lawyer and see if there's any precedent already set.
I could imagine police could easily film the process and a video would be enough proof for any judge. The phone shows a pin entry, a reboot, and then a welcome screen just like a factory reset has been done. Right?
It does, but it's pretty obvious that something unusual has happened.
The phone boots into Google's "Someone is fucking around" boot screen and waits there for a response.
Precisely my point. It's self evident without need for further digital proof. Just a video of the screen.