Posted on Feb 17, 2016
Judge: Apple must help FBI hack San Bernardino killer's phone
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Posted 9 y ago
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Apple: Complying with order to break into terrorist's iPhone... | RallyPoint
http://www.statesman.com/news/technology/apple-complying-order-break-terrorists-iphone-coul/nqRRw/Privacy or terrorism? Is that the question? Many wonder what the US will have end up doing to fight world terrorism. Can terrorism be allowed to hoist US on our own freedoms? What's your take on this issue?
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MAJ Bryan Zeski
I went looking for an article about this, but didn't see it. Feel free to merge! Thanks!
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Apple was not created as a spy organization. They are a private company. Hacking and law enforcement should be left up to the appropriate organization.
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I am definitely sympathetic with the FBI here. The phone very well could contain useful information. On the other hand, I am always amused at how many die-hard Conservatives will fight even the slightest glance at gun regulations but sell their souls when it comes to this. The government wants a way around Apple's encryption - A way that once they have it, can be applied to ANY iPhone whether or not it was owned by a mass murderer. Once Apple does this, there's no going back.
If you want limited government, then this is one of those moments when you have to accept that freedom sometimes has teeth and take a position that makes you feel a little sick inside.
If you want limited government, then this is one of those moments when you have to accept that freedom sometimes has teeth and take a position that makes you feel a little sick inside.
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SGT John " Mac " McConnell
What do you think of this article SGT Jeremiah B. http://www.nydailynews.com/news/national/apple-unlocked-70-iphones-refusal-article-1.2536178
Apple unlocked at least 70 iPhones before refusal
It appears Apple had no problem breaking into at least 70 other protected iPhones.
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SGT Jeremiah B.
SGT John " Mac " McConnell - I read about that. There appear to be some critical differences in the requirements here. The 70 phones used the old OS, whose data could be extracted with a simple tool or pulled off the cloud. The newer iPhones have a personally created encryption key, so Apple would essentially have to create a back door to. What Apple is refusing to do is decrypt user-created encryption by making the encrypting software circumventable.
Apple's argument is that the entire point of encryption is to maintain privacy and that once they provide a back door to the government (and legally establish that companies can be forced by the government to produce a product that nullifies value to their customers), there's no going back.
I agree with Apple, even if I hate terrorists AND Apple products.
Apple's argument is that the entire point of encryption is to maintain privacy and that once they provide a back door to the government (and legally establish that companies can be forced by the government to produce a product that nullifies value to their customers), there's no going back.
I agree with Apple, even if I hate terrorists AND Apple products.
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