FBI: Nearly 8,000 devices we can not hack

The FBI has been one of the biggest supporters of backdoors in devices such as smartphones and tablets, with its director, Christopher Wray, speaking at a recent international conference on cybersecurity in New York, highlighting the agency’s crackdown on electronic equipment.

Christopher Wray revealed that the FBI currently has no fewer than 7,775 encryption devices but can not crack it because it does not have the necessary knowledge to crack it. In other words, these devices, as Christopher Wray said, involve a variety of investigations that may store information that could help FBI agents fight criminals but because of the powerful cryptography that these devices employ, This information cannot be extracted.

Christopher Wray said: “Inability to access these devices is a major public safety issue and affects our full investigation.” This issue requires a thoughtful approach. Some of us are committed to working with our stakeholders to find the way forward. We need the help of the private sector. ”

Christopher Wray said some investigations were impossible because of the inability to crack encryption, including trafficking in persons, fighting terrorism, organized crime, and child molestation. Christopher Wray called for technology companies to help find a solution to the problem, essentially asking the FBI to have a backdoor for various devices and allowing the FBI and the federal government to access data that stored on those devices.

Source: Softpedia