Facebook And WhatsApp Back Apple In Fight For Encryption
More data, more problems
The battle for the right to strong encryption rages on. First we saw
Apple have to defend their users’ right to privacy regarding the iPhone
involved in the San Bernardino shooting. With one of the shooter’s
iPhone 5C units in FBI custody, the government requested that Apple
create a tool that weakens iPhone security—to which they said no. Repeatedly.
Now the CEO of Facebook-owned app WhatsApp Jan Koum and the social
network king himself, Mark Zuckerberg, are backing Apple’s decision.
The purpose of security is to safeguard privacy. Billions of people
share their most personal, intimate information using services like
ours, and they expect all of us to keep it safe from criminals and other
bad guys. Asking a single company to undermine the security of its
product for an investigation threatens the security of all of us in the
long run.
Today, WhatsApp and other companies are asking a U.S. court to overturn
an order that would require Apple to weaken the security of its product.
We are proud to stand together to demonstrate how these efforts go
beyond what the law allows and how they compromise the values upon which
our country is built."
Asking a single company to undermine the security of its product for an investigation threatens the security of all of us in the long run
He wasn’t alone. Mark Zuckerberg, head of Facebook and undisputed star of MWC 2016 added his thoughts on the matter as well yesterday, saying "Facebook stands with many technology companies to protect you and your information."
During a hearing earlier this week between Congress and the director of the FBI,
may were quick to point out that weakening encryption on our personal
devices could hurt us in the long run rather than help us. At the very
least, it would weaken protection on the average citizen while those
with malicious intent will continue to find ways around the government’s
capabilities. While some are worried about creating “evidence-free
zones,” others are troubled by weakened security for everyone because of
the few looking to harm us. As California’s own state representative
Judy Chu mentioned on Tuesday, “Safe manufacturers are not required to
keep keys to safes or locks. It's clear technology is outpacing the
FBI's capabilities.”
Facebook and WhatsApp support of Apple in their fight for encryption
against the FBI adds them to a growing list of technology companies.
Google, Amazon, Microsoft and more have come out in support of strong
encryption for their users—though skeptics wonder how much of it is true
belief and how much is purely PR. At least in the case of Amazon's
devices, their dropping of encryption in their latest firmware is definitely not for the PR.
We’ve seen instances where Apple and other companies have complied in handing over cloud data
when lawfully requested. But Apple’s stand at least shows that a line
must be drawn. This may not be the last time a government agency begs a
tech company to lower the bridge over the moat protecting local user
data. But at the very least, it begins to set the cultural norm of
privacy users can expect in their digital lives.
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