But this wasn't a criminal act. This was the government using their own tactics to get into the phone when Apple refused to help.
At that point, the government had no choice but to resort to whichever tactics necessary to break in themselves (or pay someone else to do it).
Now Apple deserves nothing.
Refuse to cooperate with the government, and the government will refuse to cooperate with you. Seems totally fair to me.
Had Apple not taken this assholish stance in the first place, the government could have been a symbiotic partner in security, rather than an adversary.
okay, i did think for a minute and concluded:
here the FBI is not a group of random hackers breaking the law, rather they are attempting to protect us Americans; Apple puts themselves and their profits ahead of us all...to me that is a significant difference thus i can't accept your construct
(long before there was a PFA i had my Grenade & Crossbones avatar at DD)
The flood gates have officially opened. Seemingly every police agency in the country is turning to the FBI now to hack into phones they want to get into. And that is just the requests we know about, God only knows how many others are in the crosshairs now. Legally or not. Because the police would never "bend" the laws to get someone would they? Nah.
land of the free
Police can bend laws and falsify evidence already. This iPhone thing doesn't introduce a new element there.
I, for one, am happy that law enforcement can now access iPhones of horrible criminals, such as rapists, murderers, child molesters, and terrorists.
A warrant gives them access to everything else, and an iPhone should not be the one thing where that is excepted, especially because of how widely it's used.
'60 Minutes' hacks congressman's phone for security report
http://thehill.com/blogs/ballot-box/...ecurity-report
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