yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

Why Apple is Rejecting The FBI’s Request for Universal Access to iPhones | Big Think.


2m read
·Nov 4, 2024

There’s a very famous phrase in the legal community – hard cases make bad law. And the circumstances that Apple and the FBI and the Justice Department find themselves in certainly not be by design. It’s a horrible tragedy that led to it, but this is a wonderful example of a very hard case.

You have, without question, somebody who has done an evil, evil, murderous thing, and they have used a device that contains information that might be not just marginally, but extraordinarily useful to law enforcement all over the world, certainly to the United States, in either solving aspects of this crime or preventing future atrocities from occurring. No question.

Apple says that it is not – and this happens to be an Apple device. Apple has designed their devices so that people can protect their information. And now a federal judge has ordered Apple to help crack the phone and gain access to that information. And Apple, in a very interesting letter from its CEO Tim Cook, has said, “Well, we don’t, we’re rejecting the judge’s order to help crack this.”

Why? Why? Because the problem that emerges is: do people have any expectation, or reasonable expectation, of privacy when they use technologies on networks? By exceeding to the judge’s request and the FBI’s request, a message would be sent to people all over the world – China, Europe, Latin America, the U.S. – that if a rule of law, if a judge – a Chinese judge, a Brazilian judge, a Russian judge – says that thing that you’ve encrypted on your device – we want access to it, it would basically mean you have no privacy.

If a rule of law – and let’s be very blunt here – Chinese and Russian rule of law standards are different than American, British, or German rule of law standards. Nobody could count on their devices to protect them in any other circumstances. To my mind, that is the definition of a hard case.

I am extraordinarily sympathetic to Apple. I’m extraordinarily sympathetic to the FBI and Justice Department. I am even more sympathetic to the families of the people who were hurt and killed in that attack, that terrorist attack. But the reality is this is one of those circumstances where there is no good answer. And whatever answer is chosen is the wrong one.

More Articles

View All
Change in expected future prices and demand | Microeconomics | Khan Academy
We’ve been talking about the law of demand and how if we hold all else equal, a change in price affects the quantity demanded. If price goes up, the quantity demanded goes down, and if price goes down, the quantity demanded goes up. So, if you hold all el…
Animals Cannot Be Blue | Explorer
[music playing] Sometimes nature plays tricks on us. What we think we know to be true may not be. Animals, for example, have lots of secrets, like their remarkable use of color to attract mates or disguise themselves from predators. Well, it turns out the…
Transformations, part 2 | Multivariable calculus | Khan Academy
So in the last video, I introduced Transformations and how you can think about functions as moving points in one space to points in another. Here, I want to show an example of what that looks like when the input space is two-dimensional. This over here i…
Worked example: finite geometric series (sigma notation) | High School Math | Khan Academy
Let’s take, let’s do some examples where we’re finding the sums of finite geometric series, and let’s just remind ourselves in a previous video we derived the formula where the sum of the first n terms is equal to our first term times 1 minus our common r…
Black Women and the Suffrage Movement | 100 Years After Women's Suffrage
Good afternoon! I’m Deborah Adam Simmons, Executive Editor for History and Culture at National Geographic. I am thrilled that we will have a conversation this afternoon with historian Martha Jones and writer Michelle Duster about the role of African-Ameri…
This Spider Wears Its Victims Like a Hat | National Geographic
This massive ant colony maintains cohesion through constant chemical communication. This signaling method facilitates the collection of food, defense of the colony, and, very creepily, collection of their dead. However, chemical signatures can be minute. …