Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Apple
  4. Computing
  5. Mobile
  6. News

How much did the FBI pay to hack the San Bernardino shooter’s iPhone? ‘A lot’

Add as a preferred source on Google

How much was the San Bernardino shooter’s iPhone worth to the Federal Bureau of Investigation? Director James Comey let slip a hint, which Reuters used to calculate a ballpark amount well north of $1.3 million.

“More than I will make in the remainder of this job … But it was, in my view, worth it.”

Recommended Videos

If the estimate is accurate, it is the largest ever publicly known amount paid for a hacking technique, beating out Zerodium, an information security firm that paid $1 million to an anonymous team of hackers to break into iOS 9.1 late last year.

The bureau paid professional “gray hat” hackers to unlock the iPhone 5C left behind by one of the San Bernardino shooters, Syed Farook. The phone sparked a month-long legal battle between Apple and the FBI, as Apple refused to create a special tool to provide access into the phone.

Apple feared that, in the wrong hands, the tool could be used against all of its customers, threatening their privacy and security. The Cupertino company’s sentiments were echoed by many other tech companies, privacy and human rights groups, as well as legal, tech, cryptology, and cybersecurity experts. The FBI dropped the case after the team of anonymous hackers successfully cracked the phone.

Comey was speaking at the Aspen Security Forum in London, when he was asked how much the FBI paid to unlock the iPhone. “A lot,” he said. “More than I will make in the remainder of this job, which is seven years and four months for sure. But it was, in my view, worth it.”

Reuters estimated that since, according to the FBI and the U.S. Office of Management and Budget, Comey’s annual salary as of January 2015 was $183,300, that amount will reach $1.34 million by the day his term ends.

The contents of the iPhone didn’t show any evidence of ties to ISIS, but it helped put to bed a few theories the FBI held about what happened during an 18-minute gap from when the shooters left the holiday party, after they killed 14 people. It’s still unknown what exactly happened during that time period.

Julian Chokkattu
Former Mobile and Wearables Editor
Julian is the mobile and wearables editor at Digital Trends, covering smartphones, fitness trackers, smartwatches, and more…
This flower identification app turns every walk into Pokémon Go for plants
flormie lets iPhone users scan flowers, save them as collectibles, and build a calmer kind of real-world collection game.
Electronics, Mobile Phone, Phone

A new flower identification app wants daily walks to feel a little more like Pokémon Go, only with fewer raids and far less public phone shouting.

flormie is an iPhone app built around a simple loop. Find a flower outside, scan it, and add it to a growing collection. That turns a normal walk into a low-pressure nature hunt, without pretending every sidewalk needs battle mechanics.

Read more
Your iPhone will soon warn you before you fall for a scam
iOS 27's new Trust Insights system watches for signs of coercion during calls, texts, and email to help users avoid scams.
iOS 27 Trust Insights featured

Apple is introducing a new anti-fraud system with iOS 27 that's designed to catch scam attempts in real time. The framework, called Trust Insights, monitors user behavior during calls, text conversations, or email exchanges and can trigger a warning or add a verification step if it detects signs of manipulation.

How Trust Insights works

Read more
Samsung’s Galaxy S27 Pro and Ultra could finally ditch that ancient selfie camera
Samsung might finally be done recycling old camera hardware.
Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra smartphone in blue color.

Samsung has used the same 12MP front camera on its flagships for what feels like forever, and I was starting to think it would never change, but a recent leak gives us some hope. According to Ice Universe, a reliable source, GalaxyClub, known for its accurate Samsung leaks, has said that we might finally see a selfie-camera upgrade with Samsung’s next-generation flagships, the Galaxy S27 Pro and Ultra, and it’s not just a spec bump either. 

https://twitter.com/universeice/status/2072837912979509422

Read more