villain
Hates Beyoncé
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- Apr 22, 2014
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Then American people would stop buying iPhones and they would buy Samsung for example since is not american.
Exactly. If Apple do it, it's not just going to end there.
Then American people would stop buying iPhones and they would buy Samsung for example since is not american.
Then American people would stop buying iPhones and they would buy Samsung for example since is not american.
He is saying that if Apple made this backdoor then there will be no one in US would buy iPhone, since US Government is justified to got their data for the fact it's an American company. They just go out and buy Samsung, you know a Korean product
China is watching the dispute closely. Analysts say that the Chinese government does take cues from the United States when it comes to encryption regulations, and that it would most likely demand that multinational companies provide accommodations similar to those in the United States.
Last year, Beijing backed off several proposals that would have mandated that foreign firms provide encryption keys for devices sold in China after heavy pressure from foreign trade groups. Nonetheless, a Chinese antiterrorism law passed in December required foreign firms to hand over technical information and to aid with decryption when the police demand it in terrorism-related cases.
While it is still not clear how the law might be carried out, it is possible a push from American law enforcement agencies to unlock iPhones would embolden Beijing to demand the same. China would also most likely push to acquire any technology that would allow it to unlock iPhones. Just after Apple introduced tougher encryption standards in 2014, Apple users in China were targeted by an attack that sought to obtain login information from iCloud users.
He is saying that if Apple made this backdoor then there will be no one in US would buy iPhone, since US Government is justified to got their data for the fact it's an American company. They just go out and buy Samsung, you know a Korean product
Round of applause.So because it's easier to have a surveillance state, terrorism stemming from geopolitics rather than religion should simply continue unabated because the innocent victims abroad are inconsequential in this discussion? You might want to bear in mind the actual number of innocent people victimized by domestic terrorism in the US is dwarfed by those via geopolitical terrorism that invariably leads to the former.
And the last thing any individual should hope for is the US government & private industry reaching a compromise over anything, particularly individual rights
The power structure of global society has already changed though and decisions like this only serve to crystallize the direction these shifts are heading. It's unrealistic bordering on ridiculous assume entities like Apple are tied to nations and the quicker people accept that, the easier it will be to digest news like this.I'm saying its unrealistic to change the power structure of global society where states seek to maximize their advantage over one another . It is however realistic for a democratic state to work with private industry to reach a compromise between privacy and terrorism. Both sides can be assuaged imo.
In regards to surveillance there have always been safeguards in place to prevent overreach and they've almost always failed. Former NSA Director Keith Alexander and Director of National Intelligence James Clapper both lied to congress repeatedly before and during Select Committees on Intelligence, sometimes under oath and were only exposed thanks to the Snowden leaks, so what chance do the lone representatives of random private companies have in ensuring the likes of the aforementioned don't abuse this ungodly power they're asking for again? Hell, every declassified and leaked document on the matter has proven time and time again, given the opportunity, government agencies repeatedly exceed their authority on the matter of surveillance to a point where it hinders their ability to do the jobs they're designed to do in the first place.There can be safeguards instilled to prevent the abuse though - having a company representative embedded with the government to ensure compliance etc.
Another round of applause.Maybe if NSA wasn't tapping the wrong people they would catch the terrorists before they kill people.
This would be a great point if mass surveillance had ever stopped a terrorist attack on US soil.Interesting point. So basically, profit logic trumps the preservation of life.
Round of applause.
The power structure of global society has already changed though and decisions like this only serve to crystallize the direction these shifts are heading. It's unrealistic bordering on ridiculous assume entities like Apple are tied to nations and the quicker people accept that, the easier it will be to digest news like this.
In regards to surveillance there have always been safeguards in place to prevent overreach and they've almost always failed. Former NSA Director Keith Alexander and Director of National Intelligence James Clapper both lied to congress repeatedly before and during Select Committees on Intelligence, sometimes under oath and were only exposed thanks to the Snowden leaks, so what chance do the lone representatives of random private companies have in ensuring the likes of the aforementioned don't abuse this ungodly power they're asking for again? Hell, every declassified and leaked document on the matter has proven time and time again, given the opportunity, government agencies repeatedly exceed their authority on the matter of surveillance to a point where it hinders their ability to do the jobs they're designed to do in the first place.
Another round of applause.
This would be a great point if mass surveillance had ever stopped a terrorist attack on US soil.
Given the amount of time, resources and energy the FBI employ engineering their own imaginary terror plots to prop up their own figures, I'd say not as many one would think:How do you know one hasn't already ?
Fake terror plots, paid informants: the tactics of FBI 'entrapment' questioned
Critics say bureau is running a sting operation across America, targeting vulnerable people by luring them into fake terror plots
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2011/nov/16/fbi-entrapment-fake-terror-plots
Terrorist Plots, Hatched by the F.B.I.
DAVID K. SHIPLERAPRIL 28, 2012
THE United States has been narrowly saved from lethal terrorist plots in recent years — or so it has seemed. A would-be suicide bomber was intercepted on his way to the Capitol; a scheme to bomb synagogues and shoot Stinger missiles at military aircraft was developed by men in Newburgh, N.Y.; and a fanciful idea to fly explosive-laden model planes into the Pentagon and the Capitol was hatched in Massachusetts.
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/04/29/opinion/sunday/terrorist-plots-helped-along-by-the-fbi.html?_r=0
Government agents 'directly involved' in most high-profile US terror plots
• Human Rights Watch documents 'sting' operations
• Report raises questions about post-9/11 civil rights
http://www.theguardian.com/world/20...ents-directly-involved-us-terror-plots-report
etc. etc.
Given the amount of time, resources and energy the FBI employ engineering their own imaginary terror plots to prop up their own figures, I'd say not as many one would think:
I think the government should be able to monitor phones of any suspects. Having said that if they get information that is not related to terrorism, that information should not be allowable.
Every report, every leak, every declassified document on the issue of ubiquitous surveillance and data mining has proven without fail that it's ridiculously ineffective at identifying and thwarting legitimate large-scale terror plots. Those are the facts. No amount of emotive language or boogeymen will change that. In terms of tangible, realistic alternatives, they include redirecting the trillions of dollars spent on projects like PRISM into LEGITIMATE intelligence gathering.That doesn't really answer the question does it. Allow me then - the correct answer is you don't know. There could well be numerous large attacks that have been averted through surveillance, which is generally the best way to find out what terrorists are doing before they do it. What is quite interesting in this debate is that the opponents of surveillance are quite weak in terms of providing tangible and realistic alternatives that can help thwart attacks before they happen (and no changing foreign policy is not one of them).
Very long, I guess. Although, there are nice heuristic algorithms that solve many NP-hard problems reasonably fast. I even had to implement one of those as feature for my thesis.@Revan, how far away are we from solving P = NP?![]()
A few posters here would welcome Putin in their back doorNext China, Putin, Assad etc will be asking for back doors.
Every report, every leak, every declassified document on the issue of ubiquitous surveillance and data mining has proven without fail that it's ridiculously ineffective at identifying and thwarting legitimate large-scale terror plots. Those are the facts.
No amount of emotive language or boogeymen will change that. In terms of tangible, realistic alternatives, they include redirecting the trillions of dollars spent on projects like PRISM into LEGITIMATE intelligence gathering.
A few posters here would welcome Putin in their back door
I hope all big companies, especially Google/Alphabet, Microsoft, Oracle, Facebook are with Apple on this. The Pandora box should not be allowed to open.
I hope all big companies, especially Google/Alphabet, Microsoft, Oracle, Facebook are with Apple on this. The Pandora box should not be allowed to open.
When you or anyone makes such a statement, you should also include a viable solution as to how the state should stop terrorist attacks from happening where terrorists are using encrypted communication apps to plot Paris style attacks. Imagine a scenario where an attack was imminent and the ISIS plotters were using an app to lay out their plans. Would you want the attack to go ahead because you privilege privacy over mass murder ?
That is what the want.
The problem is a few things:
1 - even if you do produce a backdoor in extreme circumstances; a six-digit numeric code can be cracked in about 1 day, but a complex alpha-numeric password could take over 10 years due to all the possible combination of numbers and letters.
2 - each individual phone has its own hardware key that's created as part of the chip, Apple doesn't store records of this and in order to extract the data off the chip, you'd have to melt the plastic off it and use lasers to hopefully (because theres no guarantee in each case) recover bits of it.
3 - there's no guarantee that having the data would have prevented San Bernardino and similar attacks happening, and there's no guarantee it will prevent future attacks from happening either.
4 - there's no guarantee that it can be just used on a case-by-case basis, and if put in the wrong hands the technique could be used to unlock hundreds of millions of data, bank information, classified reports etc. and there's no guarantee it can be traced after the fact because the whole purpose is to be able to extract the data and not have it traced back.
The FBI are relying on a law that was written in the 1700's for their case, and Apple have given them all the information that they are able to extract legally.
Personally I wouldn't want such a tool to exist.
He's also uniquely placed to speak to the fact that the US government can't be trusted with this kind of information.Snowden's comments are a bit rich...after all this is a guy who a guest of an authoritarian dictator who routinely uses his own proxies to control social media in his own country.
http://www.theverge.com/2014/1/31/5...-control-over-russias-facebook-pavel-durov-vk
I have thought about that, and generally I don't give a shit about my privacy compared to possible terrorist acts. The problem is that for how long this masterkey will be only in the hand of US government (who btw, doesn't have a good history when it comes to private data)? Soon, other countries will require that, and soon many hackers and possibly terrorists will have a way to access other people data.When you or anyone makes such a statement, you should also include a viable solution as to how the state should stop terrorist attacks from happening where terrorists are using encrypted communication apps to plot Paris style attacks. Imagine a scenario where an attack was imminent and the ISIS plotters were using an app to lay out their plans. Would you want the attack to go ahead because you privilege privacy over mass murder ?
I hope all big companies, especially Google/Alphabet, Microsoft, Oracle, Facebook are with Apple on this. The Pandora box should not be allowed to open.
Indeed, it is. But this is a step further.I think it already is. Traffic is already monitored, and if your phone is targeted I think the NSA already has the ability to listen to calls, monitor data transfer, and even turn its mic on if it isn't.
Also, pre-Patriot Act restrictions were about the NSA not monitoring Americans. Foreigners have always been treated as fair game to monitor.
It was a coy dig at the perma-crocked, not fit for purpose, money bonfire that is the Utah Data Center ¯\_(ツ)_/¯Wow, the US has spent "trillions of dollars" on PRISM ? That's quite astounding.
As someone who was once on the inside of the game, the reality is that there are basically just two primary ways of thwarting attacks before they happen - through surveillance or human intelligence. Listening to what insurgents/terrorists are planning is probably the best way to find out what they are doing, when they are going to do it, and what means they will use. If there is a better way to know then I'm all ears, but until such time tracking communications is the best way to mitigate attacks.
Civil Liberties. The final front for Neo-Liberalism's 'war on terror'.
Surely they can't be legally compelled to create a piece of software that doesn't currently exist on behalf of the government?I understand Apple's position, and I'm kind of divided. That said, don't think they'll come out on top in the legal process.
Surely they can't be legally compelled to create a piece of software that doesn't currently exist on behalf of the government?
If it already existed I can imagine them being forced to grant access, but this is very different.
That said, the US courts have lost the ability to surprise me.