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- 19 Jul 2010
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He sounds like he touches kids tbh.
Glad your not on the hangmans jury

Maybe the guy just doesn't like people going through his stuff ?
He sounds like he touches kids tbh.
Seriously...just brute force the damn thing.
Or better yet, reset it by other means...not exactly hard =/ Especially whenthe police have the resources, its an exscuse tbh
So do you think drink drivers who refuse to give a breath sample should be let off scot free?
Obvious straw man is obvious.
The punishment for failing to provide a specimen is very harsh so no one gets off scott free.
Ah the old "he looks like he's guilty so he must be" what happened to evidence, innocent till proven guilty and stuff.
lol, bs.
Do you understand the cryptography involved? You can't brute force it before the universe melts and there is nothing to 'reset'.
lol, I don't think you understand the amount of effort it takes to break encryption.
Assuming he is using something like AES (probably) and the password is 50 characters as it says.
If you dedicated 100% of the CPU of every computer in the whole world including supercomputers to brute forcing it, I guarentee you that he would have died of old age before the password was broken.
They have enough evidence to sieze his PC, somit goes a bit beyond your standard "nothing to hide" discussion.
Let's say you have one password which decrypts the data and one which just deletes everything, what would happen if you gave the police the deleting one 'by accident'?
Not really
Yep...You could, it would just take time naturally...Hence why it isn't used much in these cases
Well I do, as i've worked along side various HTC units in the past and they've had to deal with far worse.
But nevermind, send it to an actual unit and it will get done in time
Let's say you have one password which decrypts the data and one which just deletes everything, what would happen if you gave the police the deleting one 'by accident'?
you would get done with obstruction i'd imagine
Let's say you have one password which decrypts the data and one which just deletes everything, what would happen if you gave the police the deleting one 'by accident'?
Sorry but assuming a strong password it's incredibly improbable you will ever recover the password due to the vast size of the search space.
Let's say you have one password which decrypts the data and one which just deletes everything, what would happen if you gave the police the deleting one 'by accident'?
I'm not talking about brute force now