Companies selling exploits for smartphones talking about #GrapheneOS in their internal documents and their limitation and failure in targeting the OS is only further evidence of the success of our recent mobile security and privacy work.
A multi-million dollar industry of companies exist just to discover and sell exploits for devices. Cellebrite is only one of many. Attacks by actors of such capabilities is what GrapheneOS aims to protect against, like we had done earlier this year, where we discovered vulnerabilities these companies took advantage of and disrupted their fun with improving and adding new security features. There is more to come.
We may not be as large as they are, but think about why they have to say our name and why they separated us from Android and iOS. What we do is significant and impactful. We don't ignore the competition or be deliberately vague or misleading about capabilities like these companies have been about us.
Digital forensics is such a valuable (and in my opinion, undervalued) cyber security skill but it is a shame these titans of the industry are all secretive and protective about their work. Some go as far as to mislead the public. Transparency and co-operation is the most valuable trait in the realm of digital security and companies like these shouldn't get a waiver.
I could have so much more to say including about how these companies' software are often designed too deliberately simple or complicated to make you depend on them and give them more money. Tools like Cellebrite are so easy to navigate and use that it feels like it's designed that way to not create forensics experts that can end up doing work themselves, and that other tools are deliberately complicated to faciliate to customer to buy their training.
If you want to hit companies like these where it hurts, then try learning DFIR, learn mobile forensics, and do it without selling out to them. Reduce what they can sell to you and break the gatekeeping the sector has.
quoting#GrapheneOS uncovers leaked documentation for smartphone exploits by Cellebrite.
nevent1qâŚr59g
XRY and Cellebrite say they can do consent-based full filesystem extraction with iOS, Android and #GrapheneOS. It means they can extract data from the device once the user provides the lock method, which should always be expected. They unlock, enable developer options and use ADB.
Cellebrite's list of capabilities provided to customers in April 2024 shows they can successfully exploit every non-GrapheneOS Android device brand both BFU and AFU, but not GrapheneOS if patch level is past late 2022. It shows only Pixels stop brute force via the secure element.
Cellebrite has similar capabilities for iOS devices. This is also from April 2024. We can get the same information from newer months. In the future, we'll avoid sharing screenshots and will simply communicate it via text since to prevent easily tracking down the ongoing leaks.
Pixel 6 and later or the latest iPhones are the only devices where a random 6 digit PIN can't be brute forced in practice due to the secure element. Use a strong passphrase such as 6-8 diceware words for a user profile with data you need secured forever regardless of exploits.
Pixels are doing a bit better on the secure element front and iPhones are doing a bit better against OS exploitation, but not by much.
As always, this shows the importance of our auto-reboot feature which gets the data back at rest after a timer since the device was locked.
Our focus in this area is defending against exploitation long enough for auto-reboot to work. It's set to 18 hours since the device was locked by default, but users can set it as low as 10 minutes. Since around January, we massively improved security against these attacks.
By default, our recently added USB-C port control feature disallows new USB connections in AFU mode after the device is locked and fully disables USB data at a hardware level once there aren't active USB connections. Users can set it to also do this in BFU or even when unlocked.
Users with a high threat model can fully disable USB including USB-PD/charging while the OS is booted to only allow charging while powered off or booted into the fastboot/fastbootd/recovery/charging modes.
GrapheneOS on 8th gen Pixels is ideal due to hardware memory tagging.
Consent-based data extraction (FFS) is not in the scope of what we're trying to defend against beyond shipping our secure duress PIN/password implementation to replace insecure approaches via apps. Data users can backup is inherently obtainable with consent, which is nearly all.
Within the past 24 hours, there has been an attack on GrapheneOS across social media platforms misrepresenting consent-based data extraction as GrapheneOS being compromised/penetrated. The person doing it is pretending to be multiple people and falsely claiming we covered it up.
GrapheneOS is the only OS having success defending against these attacks. We could do more with a successful hardware partnership such as having encrypted memory with a per-boot key instead of relying on our kernel memory zeroing combined with auto-reboot and fastbootd zeroing.
New versions of iOS and Pixel OS often invalidate their existing exploits, but devices in AFU are stuck in AFU mode waiting for new exploits.
Random 6 digit PIN is only secure on a Pixel/iPhone and only due to secure element throttling. Use a strong passphrase to avoid this.
If you wonder why duress PIN/password is taking so long, it's because we aren't doing it for show like existing implementations. It needs to work properly and guarantee data will be unrecoverable with no way to interrupt it. Slowly rebooting to recovery to wipe isn't acceptable.
See https://x.com/GrapheneOS/status/1775305179581018286 for our thread covering the firmware improvements we helped get implemented in the April 2024 release for Pixels. It doesn't currently really help the stock Pixel OS because they haven't blocked the OS exploits that are being used yet but it helps us.
Our hope is that our upcoming 2-factor fingerprint unlock feature combined with a UI for random passphrase and PIN generation will encourage most users to use a 6-8 diceware word passphrase for primary unlock and fingerprint + random 6-digit PIN for convenient secondary unlock.
Cellebrite documentation and has stated they'll upload future versions of it if you want to look at the rest of it:
https://discuss.grapheneos.org/d/12848-claims-made-by-forensics-companies-their-capabilities-and-how-grapheneos-fares/4
We have info on XRY, Graykey and others but not the same level of reliable details as this.