
Ted Olson says Congress should make encryption decision
Attorney Ted Olson, who recently signed on to help Apple in its case with the FBI, says that Congress, not the courts, should decide on encryption.
Attorney Ted Olson, who recently signed on to help Apple in its case with the FBI, says that Congress, not the courts, should decide on encryption.
The FBI and Apple will soon testify before the House Judiciary Committee on the matter of balancing encryption and safety.
U.S. Attorney General Loretta Lynch has offered her thoughts on the current phone unlocking case between the Apple and the FBI, saying that she hopes Apple will comply with the federal court order.
The next major version of iOS could contain the most public and controversial security enhancements yet.
Ahead of his testimony before the House Judiciary Committee on March 1, you can read the opening statement of Apple's Bruce Sewell.
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Jarrod Burguan, police chief of San Bernardino, has weighed in on the phone decryption case between the FBI and Apple.
This is not an Apple versus the FBI thing. It's bigger than that, and will have lingering effects on each and every person using technology for the foreseeable future. I stand with Apple, but more importantly I stand for privacy — mine, yours, everybody's.
Google and Facebook are reportedly planning to file court motions in support of Apple as it enters its case against the FBI next week over an encrypted iPhone used by one of the San Bernardino shooting suspects.
Apple has struck back at the FBI's Feb 19 court order, filing a motion of its own to prevent the creation of a GovernmentOS (GovOS) that would weaken security for all iPhone and iPadowners.