Google CEO offers some support for Apple in encryption battle
Technically Incorrect: Sundar Pichai says that what a court is expecting from Apple "could be a troubling precedent."
Technically Incorrect offers a slightly twisted take on the tech that's taken over our lives.
Edward Snowden wanted Google to say something.
After Apple CEO Tim Cook had insisted his company intends to fight a court order asking it to hack the iPhone used by one of the San Bernardino terrorists, the self-exiled former government employee offered a sobering tweet.
"This is the most important tech case in a decade. Silence means @google picked a side, but it's not the public's," he wrote.
That silence from Google has now been broken.
In a series of tweets, the company's CEO, Sundar Pichai, offered what some saw as support for Cook's position.
"Important post by @tim_cook. Forcing companies to enable hacking could compromise users' privacy," he wrote. "We know that law enforcement and intelligence agencies face significant challenges in protecting the public against crime and terrorism. We build secure products to keep your information safe and we give law enforcement access to data based on valid legal orders."
This echoed Cook's contention to NPR that "if they [the authorities] ask in a way that is correct, and has been through the courts as is required, then to the degree that we have information, we give that information."
Pichai seemed to be at least somewhat supportive of Cook. "But that's wholly different than requiring companies to enable hacking of customer devices & data," he tweeted. "Could be a troubling precedent."
So does Google stand with Apple? Well, perhaps.
Pichai's final thought was "Looking forward to a thoughtful and open discussion on this important issue."
This falls slightly short of "I stand with Tim Cook against the government."
Cook has been critical of Google and other competitors of not taking security as seriously -- in his view -- as Apple does.
Cook has described privacy as an issue of morality. His clear implication has been that the likes of Google and Facebook have been far more laissez-faire on that issue than has Apple.
It might be odd, therefore, if Google suddenly stood foursquare with Apple in its fight against the FBI and the courts.
At heart, technology has moved at a far faster pace than has the law. In its case against Apple, the FBI is trying to use a law from 1789 -- the All Writs Act -- to demand that Apple contravene its own security features in order to give access to a terrorist's phone.
Some might say that this is not the best case for Apple to be pursuing. The impression left is that it's putting a terrorist's privacy ahead of national security.
However, even Pichai's somewhat guarded words will serve to bolster the notion that Cook may not be entirely alone in his insistence that user privacy must be protected at all costs.
The next question is whether Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella and other tech leaders show support for Apple. Or whether they'll let Cook and his lawyers carry out the fight and see not only whether there's any conclusion, but how long it might take to actually reach one.
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Family of murdered soldier criticizes Apple's refusal to hack San Bernadino shooter's iPhone
The uncle of British soldier Lee Rigby, who was killed by Islamic extremists in 2013, has called Tim Cook's insistence on prioritizing privacy "short-sighted."
The family of a British soldier murdered by Islamic extremists has criticized Apple's refusal to abide by a court order to hack into an iPhone linked to December's terrorist attack in San Bernardino, California.
Apple Chief Executive Tim Cook spoke out against the court order on Wednesday, calling the demand "chilling" and saying that compliance would be a major setback for online privacy. He was backed by a number of digital rights groups and tech leaders, but not everyone agrees with his stance.
Apple is "protecting a murderer's privacy at the cost of public safety," Ray McClure, the uncle of Fusilier Lee Rigby, told the BBC on Thursday. Rigby was off duty and walking down the street near his barracks in Woolwich, England, in May 2013 when he was the victim of a brutal attack by two men who told witnesses they were avenging the killing of Muslims by British soldiers.
At the heart of the debate is the ongoing tussle over encryption between tech giants on the one hand and law enforcement and intelligence agencies on the other. Facebook, Apple and Google all want to protect the privacy of their customers by ensuring their security is watertight, but the US and UK governments are putting pressure on them to create new ways to hack devices, arguing that privacy should not come at the expense of national security.
In the court order handed to Apple, the company was told it must assist the FBI in unlocking an iPhone linked to San Bernardino gunman Syed Rizwan Farook. The FBI wants Apple build a new version of its iOS mobile software that would be able to bypass the iPhone's security so that the agency could hack any device remotely.
The company has been working with the FBI since the attack, handing over data in its possession when it was available and offering a number of "our best ideas," Cook said in an open letter published on Apple's website. The software the FBI wanted does not currently exist and Apple had no plans to create it, he said. "The US government has asked us for something we simply do not have, and something we consider too dangerous to create."
McClure got in touch with the BBC after reading Cook's letter, saying he thought the company was being short-sighted. "Valuable evidence is on that smartphone and Apple is denying the FBI access to that information," McClure said, arguing that a warrant to search a smartphone should be no different than a warrant used to search a property.
"I would hate to see on the streets of London another murder like happened to Lee Rigby, I'd hate to see another attack like happened in Paris," said McClure. "How many victims of crime are not getting justice because of Apple's stance?"
Privacy advocates and tech industry leaders are standing by Cook. Jan Koum, founder of Facebook-owned messenger WhatsApp, said that he admired Cook, while Google Chief Executive Sundar Pichai tweeted that ordering companies to hack into customer devices "could be a troubling precedent."
McClure said that he understood the value of encryption, but not at the expense of helping the authorities. "I'm not saying take encryption off the iPhone, but there has to be a balance."
Apple did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
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