The pseudoscience of those forensics is powerful because if has a lot of technobabble that makes it sound well supported by evidence, and because it can pass as a science to the jury and even judges. The crime series that people eat up rely on dishing that technobabble step by step so the average person feels like they're being educated in detail about something that can apparently be replicated by anyone because "it's science". Science is for everyone and people can peer behind the curtain to see how the sausage is made.
But Cellebrite is unambiguously a private, for profit enterprise. They haven't established themselves as a "science" like authority in the average person's eyes, they actively avoid explaining the processes. They're just a company paid by a customer to deliver what the customer wants. So in the average person's eyes the difference should be obvious: this isn't science, it's not for everyone (just for the Police), and the people are not allowed to peer behind the curtain. And like authorities like to say "honest people don't need to hide things".
So as far as jury trials go there may still be a fighting chance.
But Cellebrite is unambiguously a private, for profit enterprise. They haven't established themselves as a "science" like authority in the average person's eyes, they actively avoid explaining the processes. They're just a company paid by a customer to deliver what the customer wants. So in the average person's eyes the difference should be obvious: this isn't science, it's not for everyone (just for the Police), and the people are not allowed to peer behind the curtain. And like authorities like to say "honest people don't need to hide things".
So as far as jury trials go there may still be a fighting chance.