![]() ![]() ![]() Your only realistic way to get your data back is to hope you have a backup somewhere. No, even IT-professionals will not be able to get your data back from that data storage on the phone. No, that you have access to "Apple coders" with "secret information" about the encryption will not change the fact that the data is lost. No, that you have 1000 years of time on your hands for brute forcing will not change the fact that the data is lost. No, that newer and faster computers are released every year will not change the fact that the data is lost. Just to answer your previous counter-arguments from the older question: There's no practical way of getting that key from the Secure Enclave now, and there's no practical way of breaking the encryption with the key gone. It is all entirely down to the fact that the data was encrypted with the AES-256 encryption algorithm using a key derived from information that was previously stored exclusively within the Secure Enclave in that phone - and now gone. It being practically impossible has nothing todo with snapshots, disassembly of the device or how solid state storage differs from tape or hard drive storage. Where I detailed in lengths why it is not practically possible. How to copy all bytes of a phone (formatted or not, 64GB/64B) into a computer hard drive? This is basically a duplicate of your other question here: It is also totally false that this was "very easy" before iOS 12. No, this is not possible for any practical scenario.
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