Posted on 03/01/2016 2:50:22 PM PST by John W
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- The nation's top law officer called for dialogue with the tech industry, but also turned up the heat on Apple for refusing to help the FBI unlock an encrypted iPhone used by an extremist mass killer in San Bernardino.
"One risk is making this all about Apple when in reality it's about all of us," U.S. Attorney General Loretta Lynch told an audience at a major cybersecurity industry conference in San Francisco on Tuesday.
"We have to decide," she added. "Do we let one company, no matter how great a company, no matter now beautiful their devices - do we let one company decide this issue for all of us? Do we let one company decide this is how investigations are going to be conducted?"
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If they do win, I might switch completely over to Apple. The government can’t crack the stuff.
Unless they mean “We just need Apple to write the software one time, and then we can decide whose phone we can break into and when — but we promise we’ll never do it without a warrant! We’d never do it based on the owner’s politics or do it to our ex-girlfriend’s phone! You can trust us!”
Here is how the latest version of the Apple security system works and why it can’t be easily decrypted with the new version of OS.
The thumbprint identification done during installation is I think used to generate the encryption key and then it is added to the number pad ID as a backup.
The final key is then stored on a memory chip not accessible to the OS but only to the internal microprocessor.
I suppose if they had cut the guys thumb off, it would have been possible to get in by using it.
The problem is the police and DHS messed up the procedure and now the phone is in full lock down.
This was part of CA requirement that there be a deactivation switch in case a phone is stolen.
I’m not sure what they are going to get out of getting inside the phone. They already have the phone records from the cell phone provider.
Unless it’s a false flag to shepherd everyone onto Apple. I doubt it, but you can never be paranoid enough, evidently.
The only legal reason that Apple has to fight this order is that the tools don't exist, and creating them would be an undue burden under the Act (demanding that they create something that doesn't exist in order to help the government). What you are proposing would forfeit the case instantly.
WOW.......you do go on!!
Trump came out in favor of the Government's side in this dispute.
That is disappointing.
It has been getting out to the public.
I have followed this on tech forums for over a month.
So you’re saying Apple’s story is correct, and that it’s slowly getting out? Good!
It’s amazing how uniformly compliant the mass media has been in distorting the story, making it look like Apple’s refusing to unlock this specific phone, even with a court order.
If I were Apple, I would develop the tool to retrieve the data.
Lynch is too cute by half when claiming that their request is to just unlock this one phone. That one time sets a precedent large enuf to drive a 18 wheeler truck through.
I agree with Apple that Congress should make this call, not an unelected judge.
I see Lynch has peeled her self away from the Hillary investigation to attack a beloved liberal brand.
Loretta Lynch Vows to Prosecute Anti-Muslim Speech
Send this bitch to Federal prison.
Hey, about HRC’s emails...nat’l security don’t ya’ think? A nit more important tan a flippin’ iphon.
If they were able to crack the phone on their own do you think the Feds would have told us or kept it secret so they can keep spying on us? Maybe they really did break it and this is all a ruse?
The NSA has trouble keeping it’s own backdoor hacks secure.
http://www.businessinsider.com/john-mcafee-nsa-back-door-gives-every-us-secret-to-enemies-2016-2
Cook has been very helpful with China’s “cyber security” issues. In China cyber security means that they want backdoors and keys so they can keep an over watch of potential trouble makers. They don’t want anymore Tiananmen Squares.
One federal judge in New York agrees with Apple.
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