p*******m 发帖数: 20761 | 1 You likely know that Apple's iMessage is encrypted well enough that law
enforcement can't snoop on your messages, but it's now very clear that this
security is setting up a conflict with the US government. The New York Times
understands that Apple refused at least one Department of Justice request
for iMessage chats between suspects using iPhones. There's no way to comply,
according to the response. Reportedly, the case ruffled enough feathers
that officials at the FBI and Justice Department were pushing for legal
action against Apple. That never materialized, but there's no doubt that the
Cupertino crew is on notice.
It's important to note that messages uploaded to iCloud aren't encrypted,
and Apple has handed over iMessage chats stored that way. However, it can't
deliver real-time conversations or any other messages that aren't in the
open -- Apple doesn't keep its own copies, and can't decrypt the discussions
itself. And since Apple isn't subject to federal wiretap laws, the only
real way for the US to compel disclosure would be to mandate security back
doors, which are facing stiff opposition from experts and civil liberty
advocates. One thing's for sure: between this and Microsoft's resistance
over foreign data requests, the feds will have to fight the tech industry
tooth-and-nail to get some of the surveillance info they want. | f*******t 发帖数: 7549 | | f*******t 发帖数: 7549 | | p*******m 发帖数: 20761 | 4 Apple and Microsoft are winning the PR game against the US government
By Sead Fadilpašić9 minutes ago
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winner victory
Microsoft and Apple are battling the US government over the right to keep
their users’ data safe, and according to a report by The New York Times,
the American tech companies are winning.
At least they’re winning in the public relations game, as the general
notion today is that those companies are doing everything they can to
protect their users’ privacy.
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