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http://m.rte.ie/news/2016/0217/768635-apple-fbi-san-bernardino/
This fascinates me and I'm sure there's more at stake than meets the eye. I'm also very interested how the public are going to perceive it.
I'm guessing the issue for Apple is a concern that whatever mod they do could be leaked (which means not trusting the FBI's water-tightness) or that the mod could be reverse engineered and applied to other phones (which the FBI would probably love to have). There are probably lots more things going on behind the scenes too beyond public statements.
This fascinates me and I'm sure there's more at stake than meets the eye. I'm also very interested how the public are going to perceive it.
I'm guessing the issue for Apple is a concern that whatever mod they do could be leaked (which means not trusting the FBI's water-tightness) or that the mod could be reverse engineered and applied to other phones (which the FBI would probably love to have). There are probably lots more things going on behind the scenes too beyond public statements.
Apple has opposed a court ruling that ordered it to help the FBI break into an iPhone recovered from a San Bernardino shooter, heightening a dispute between tech companies and law enforcement over the limits of encryption.
Apple CEO Tim Cook said the court's demand threatened the security of Apple's customers and had "implications far beyond the legal case at hand."
Yesterday Judge Sheri Pym of US District Court in Los Angeles said that Apple must provide "reasonable technical assistance" to investigators seeking to unlock the data on an iPhone 5C that had been owned by Syed Rizwan Farook.
That assistance includes disabling the phone's auto-erase function, which activates after 10 consecutive unsuccessful passcode attempts, and helping investigators to submit passcode guesses electronically.