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:shocked: Honestly: I'm not sure that they should do it...
the bit of news that I saw about this, seems to point to them having to develop some procedure to do this.
Would they be compensated for this effort? :dontknow:

Having said this: my sense of Patriotism tells me that they should want to help out!
 
It is not as simple as unlocking this one phone. It is creating new software that would make a back door and could be used on every iphone. Once it is created who controls it? When should it be used? Can it be kept away from hackers?
 
:shocked: Honestly: I'm not sure that they should do it...
the bit of news that I saw about this, seems to point to them having to develop some procedure to do this.
Would they be compensated for this effort? :dontknow:

Having said this: my sense of Patriotism tells me that they should want to help out!

I agree. But, how many times have you heard that the gov't is too much into our business, which takes away from our freedoms? In any case, what I say doesn't really matter. This definitely is a tough question to answer.
 
:shocked: So the question must become:
"Is it better to err on the side of safety and security; or on the side of personal freedoms?" :dontknow:
 
This is definitely a tough situation. In order to investigate potential connections to other terrorists or organizations the government is asking Apple to develop a process whereby the gov't can hack into i-phones. The potential abuse of this capability is absolutely huge both from a privacy perspective and from the potential for criminals to get access as well. I can completely understand Apple's perspective. If they create what amounts to a security flaw, and those phones start getting hacked and are used to steal identities / money, the company will be vilified by consumers, and of course the gov't will throw Apple under the bus by saying that Apple should have made what they developed more secure. Ouch! I think if it were me, I would refuse to develop it. The gov't can always work to develop their own i-phone hacking capability.
 
This is definitely a tough situation. In order to investigate potential connections to other terrorists or organizations the government is asking Apple to develop a process whereby the gov't can hack into i-phones. The potential abuse of this capability is absolutely huge both from a privacy perspective and from the potential for criminals to get access as well. I can completely understand Apple's perspective. If they create what amounts to a security flaw, and those phones start getting hacked and are used to steal identities / money, the company will be vilified by consumers, and of course the gov't will throw Apple under the bus by saying that Apple should have made what they developed more secure. Ouch! I think if it were me, I would refuse to develop it. The gov't can always work to develop their own i-phone hacking capability.


I agree, even if Apple provide help with the highest secrecy. the secrecy will not hold because like Hayden (whistleblower) are around. This might be the reason why Apple hold their ground.
 
7ou would think . . .

That those spooks and math geniuses at the National Security Agency would be able to hack into the phone. Perhaps the government is just getting lazy. This will be another case before the Supreme Court in a year or two.

:roflblack::roflblack::roflblack::roflblack::roflblack:
 
what if apple just unlocks this phone. i am sure apple has the software to do this. so if a judge tells them to unlock a particular phone, let them keep the software and just unlock that one phone
 
But if THEY develop some sort of "Master Key" for all of these devices; do you really think that they'll be able to keep it a secret??? :shocked: :roflblack::roflblack::roflblack::roflblack::roflblack::roflblack:
 
Another rock/hard place situation.

The request to do this one phone seems harmless enough. The gov't would like the information gleaned from it.

The problem lies in what then happens once the gov't has the information. This is the situation where everything can go South.

:dontknow::dontknow::dontknow: :gaah::gaah::gaah:
 
Wasn't there a quote attributed to Benjamin Franklin about this?

Good ole Ben lived in a different time.


"They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety."

How much is 'little', and how long is 'temporary'?


 
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If the gov. wants the phone opened, then it should be up to them to develop the software to open it. If they can't do that, tough crap. Maybe this is something they can outsource to China. I am sure someone over there can do it.
 
:shocked: So the question must become:
"Is it better to err on the side of safety and security; or on the side of personal freedoms?" :dontknow:

Without personal freedoms, is there really any form of safety and security?

Good on Apple! Good on Tim Cook!

There is plenty of data on the carrier side that can be obtained and used.
 
What I've heard is that Apple is saying they CAN'T unlock this phone because there is no method or s/w developed that will do it. What they are refusing to do is develop the s/w to unlock it, if that can in fact be done, because then that s/w would be available for all future phones.

I cannot imagine that the FBI or NSA can't copy all the s/w from inside the phone and work to hack it open. Once they have a copy external to the phone they don't need to worry about the phone erasing itself. I think the judge mistakenly assumed Apple would know how to unlock it without it self-destructing. Apparently they don't know.
 
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