A US magistrate ordered Apple to help unlock San Bernardino shooters iPhone, be aware it is demanding a tool to bypass the security mechanism. The smartphone belonged to Syed Farook, who with his wife Tashfeen Malik killed 14 coworkers on December 2, 2015. Police intervened but failed to capture them alive because they died in a shootout with agents. The agents seized the phone, an iPhone 5C, but they were not able to access it because it is protected by a password. In this way, the police is free to run a brute-force attack to guess the PIN and overwhelm the security feature.”]