The U.S. Department of Justice has stopped pursuing legal action against Apple in the month-long encryption feud between the two parties.
Full story from the iMore Blog...
Full story from the iMore Blog...
Not really terrists should not have any rights. Well one and that is to face the firing squad. So getting into the bums phone is fine.
I should have been more clear in my response and I've edited it as a result. I don't feel that it's a bummer that the FBI got into the terrorist's phone specifically; I feel that it's a bummer that a private entity was able to break into an iPhone. It means that there's a way in. I'm not afraid of the government. I'm not doing anything that would warrant them looking at my iPhone to begin with. I'm more afraid of someone else getting into it without my consent.
Hopefully, Cellebrite and the Feds won't leak how they did it. Hopefully, Apple knows how they did it and will patch it.
That's my main concern. And does it have anything to do with the terrorist using a weak passcode? A four-digit code is much easier to break than, for example, a 16-character alphanumeric code. Even if they found a way to bypass Apple's limits on entering incorrect passcodes, it would still be nearly impossible to use brute force to get through a strong passcode.
Well now that the debate over personal privacy versus national security is temporarily over are we back to debating iOS versus Android? Or is there something else that we can fight over?
There will always be two viewpoints. Take a look at the current debate over the iPad Pro. The 12.9" version is viewed by some as the "REAL" iPad Pro whereas the new 9.7" version is viewed by some as an "iPad Air 2 on steroids", although it carries the iPad Pro title....![]()
Well that's silly. It's a Pro because it has the word "Pro" in the title. End of debate. Lol.
I should have been more clear in my response and I've edited it as a result. I don't feel that it's a bummer that the FBI got into the terrorist's phone specifically; I feel that it's a bummer that a private entity was able to break into an iPhone. It means that there's a way in. I'm not afraid of the government. I'm not doing anything that would warrant them looking at my iPhone to begin with. I'm more afraid of someone else getting into it without my consent.
There will always be two viewpoints. Take a look at the current debate over the iPad Pro. The 12.9" version is viewed by some as the "REAL" iPad Pro whereas the new 9.7" version is viewed by some as an "iPad Air 2 on steroids", although it carries the iPad Pro title....![]()
Yeah, but I'm partially in agreement with the people calling the 12.9" iPad Pro the "Real" one, especially being that the 9.7" version has half the RAM. Furthermore, although the 9.7" version is arguably more attractive to people with older iPads, even more would flock to it, in my opinion, if it had 4 GB RAM. The iPhone 6 Plus and 6S Plus have the same amount of RAM and nearly identical innards so why couldn't the same exist in regard to both iPad Pro models?
I should have been more clear in my response and I've edited it as a result. I don't feel that it's a bummer that the FBI got into the terrorist's phone specifically; I feel that it's a bummer that a private entity was able to break into an iPhone. It means that there's a way in. I'm not afraid of the government. I'm not doing anything that would warrant them looking at my iPhone to begin with. I'm more afraid of someone else getting into it without my consent.
Cool. Now can we let this topic die?