PoetryRadiant6278

PoetryRadiant6278 t1_je1mll3 wrote

The point is that putting a wet device in rice will dry it out, but it will also pull all the starch from the rice and potentially into your phone, causing more problems than it would fix. Silica packets are always the way forward.

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PoetryRadiant6278 t1_j263uqm wrote

Reply to comment by brizzodaizzo in Does apple do that ? by isahilkumar

I mean Pegasus is an ongoing no click vulnerability within iPhone, it stands to reason there are other professional companies with the ability(and crucially desire) to build solutions that can break iPhone encryption, likely due to architectural/software flaws that cryptographic ones.

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PoetryRadiant6278 t1_j25nuj9 wrote

Reply to comment by bitman_moon in Does apple do that ? by isahilkumar

The FBI is American, this case is in India, where the laws are significantly different. It’s entirely possible-without having an in depth knowledge on the matter-that encryption standards are mandated to be different in India, or companies are mandated to be able to unlock their devices if required by LE.

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PoetryRadiant6278 t1_j25nmp1 wrote

Reply to comment by coopy1000 in Does apple do that ? by isahilkumar

This.

Apple has certain rules in place, but they also have to comply with local law if they wish to sell devices in that country.

Much like them being forced to move Chinese user data to Chinese servers under the control of government workers. Now this doesn’t mean they can instantly access all user data because that’s not how encryption works, but it’s an example of them complying by force with local law.

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PoetryRadiant6278 t1_j1q9ar8 wrote

Fair, did you buy it new? Still, batteries degrade and in some cases quite significantly depending on usage. Apple has been previously sued for their dodgy business with throttling and battery management, they aren’t doing anything behind the scenes to force people to buy new models if that’s what you’re thinking.

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