The encryption of the iPhones iMessage feature has been tripping up the Feds for some time, but now the phone's other security measures are under fire. In the latest battle between privacy and law enforcement, a federal judge in California has ordered Apple to help authorities break into the phone of the suspected San Bernardino terrorists.
Syed Rizwan Farook and his wife Tashfeen Malik shot and killed 14 people in December in 2015. Authorities were unable to get into one of their phones because the phone was locked. iPhones automatically erase the phone after too many failed unlocking attempts. The Federal Judge demanded Apple provide "reasonable technical assistance" to the FBI, namely, the means to bypass the security software that deletes the phone's contents after too many unsuccessful attempts to unlock it.
While Apple understands where the Feds are coming from, they fear that this will only begin a snowball effect that will put other consumer's security in danger.
"We believe security shouldn’t come at the expense of individual privacy," Apple's CEO Tim Cook said in a statement on the company's website."The United States government has demanded that Apple take an unprecedented step which threatens the security of our customers. We oppose this order, which has implications far beyond the legal case at hand."
Tim Cook went on to explain that the Federal Government wants a new "hackable" version of the iPhone software and he wouldn't stand by it.
Throughout the statement, Tim Cook explains that he stands against acts of terrorism, and that he is willing to work with the Feds within the scope of what makes sense. However, creating software that could put everyone one else's security at risk was not a step he was willing to take. Read the entire letter HERE.
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