MAC EFI PIN LOCK BRUTE force attack (UNSUCCESSFUL)
[Oliver] wiped the hard drive from a Macbook pro using the ‘dd’ command on another machine. This does a terrific job of getting everything off the drive, but he was still faced with the EFI PIN lock protection when he tried to put it back into the Mac. You used to be able to clear the NVRAM to get around this issue, but that exploit has now been patched. So [Oliver] set out to use a microcontroller to brute-force the EFI PIN.
You can read his back story at the link above. He had the chance to enter a 4-digit pin before the format process. now that he’s wiped the drive the code is at least 6 characters long, which is a lot a lot more possibilities (at least it’s numeric characters only!). To automate the process he programmed this Teensy board to try every possible combination. It worked terrific on a text editor but often the characters, or the enter command wouldn’t register. He guesses this was some type of protection against automated attackers. To get around the issue he added different delays between the crucial presses, and between entering each code. This fixed the issue, as you can see in the clip after the break. regrettably after two 48-hour runs that tried every code he still hasn’t gained access!