The encryption on Apple's iPhone has led the way when it comes to protecting consumers' privacy, providing a barrier so impenetrable that even Apple says it does not have a way to access a user's encrypted device and doesn't want to create a "back door" for fear of undermining security.
New questions have arisen this week in the encryption debate after federal officials said a third party successfully helped the FBI retrieve data from a locked iPhone that had been used by one of the San Bernardino shooters.
Will Officials Share Information With Apple on How the iPhone Was Accessed?
If the FBI has successfully accessed the data on the locked iPhone, will they share details about the method used with Apple?
The decision that will be made through consultation with multiple federal agencies, sources said. One federal law enforcement source said it’s important to emphasize that the ultimate solution identified in this case was not found despite the lawsuit filed against Apple, but because of the media attention generated by it.
A Brooklyn drug case with a locked iPhone may be one to watch in the future.
If the Justice Department decides to continue with its bid to compel Apple for help unlocking the phone, it is possible Apple could push the government to reveal its method for getting into the San Bernardino shooter’s phone.
Is There Something Apple Will Need to Fix?
Apple has continuously worked to enhance the security of its devices and stay steps ahead of hackers, so the company used to always fine-tuning its security features.
"From the beginning, we objected to the FBI's demand that Apple build a backdoor into the iPhone because we believed it was wrong and would set a dangerous precedent. As a result of the government’s dismissal, neither of these occurred," an Apple representative said in a statement Monday night. "We will continue to help law enforcement with their investigations, as we have done all along, and we will continue to increase the security of our products as the threats and attacks on our data become more frequent and more sophisticated."
Who Helped the FBI?
The whole reason the FBI had sought Apple's help in unlocking the iPhone is because they were not able to crack it. Officials declined to name the third party who came forward to help get into the locked iPhone.
Robert Siciliano, an online safety expert at Intel Security, told ABC News that encryption is extremely difficult but possible to crack.
"It’s certainly not what one would consider easy, that is the whole point of encryption," Siciliano said. "[But] we are dealing with computer science and science of any kind can be reverse engineered. If it can be built by putting together various technology, it can also be taken apart and its roots exposed."
Data on iPhones is encrypted and Apple has an auto-erase function making it trickier for a third party to break into a locked phone. Make 10 unsuccessful attempts to open a locked phone using the 4-digit user-created code and the iPhone and all the data it holds is rendered inaccessible. The 4-digit code you enter into your phone initiates a complex calculation that generates a unique key to unlock the data on the phone. No key, no data. The auto-erase function, if triggered, will wipe out all the encryption keys, rendering the data on the iPhone useless.
What Does This Mean for Future Cases?
The legal precedent authorities were hoping to set didn't happen, essentially punting the issue down the line for future cases that may arise.
"This seemed like the perfect case and that has evaporated but now the question is, will Congress step in?" Mark Bartholomew, a law professor at the University of Buffalo who studies encryption and cyber law, told ABC News. "This is such an important story, so I could see Congress weighing in on this issue. We need a more fine-tuned answer than what we are getting from this case. Congress needs to be precise about what this technology should look like and when consumer interests would trump law enforcement."
ABC News' Jack Date, Mike Levine and Pierre Thomas contributed to this report.
Showing posts with label Unlock iPhone. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Unlock iPhone. Show all posts
iPhone SE: Early Testing Reveals Killer Battery Life, Beating iPhone 6s, Galaxy S7
iPhone SE: better battery life than iPhone 6s? (Credit: Apple) |
We already know it’s Apple’s cheapest phone (starting at $399), uses a fast A9 processor, and has the latest Apple camera tech. And now we’re getting our first indications that it has excellent battery life.
The Wall Street Journal’s early review said the “standout news is battery life.” Based on the Journal’s stress test, the SE lasted 10 hours. That beats both the iPhone 6s and iPhone 5s by two hours and is about three hours longer than the Galaxy S7, according to the Journal.
It is important to note that the iPhone SE has a lower-resolution (1,136-by-640) display compared to the iPhone 6s’ larger 4.7-inch (1,334-by-750) screen. And considerably lower resolution than the Galaxy S7′s 5.1-incher (2,560-by-1,440), as pointed out by Mac Rumors. Typically, the larger and higher-resolution the display, the bigger the impact on battery life. The iPhone SE also does not come with 3D Touch support — albeit a feature that relatively few consumers would notice.
Source: forbes
iPhone SE: thoughts on going back to a smaller phone
New iPhone SE hands-on |
I’ve been using the new iPhone SE for a couple days now, after having a 6s for a while, and I have to be honest: going back to using a small phone feels weird. I’m convinced that Apple has to be aiming this new phone at people who either love small phones or want a reasonably-priced upgrade from a three-year-old iPhone.
Let’s face it, a new iPhone is tempting. It’s a new iPhone! But if you’ve already graduated to a bigger phone, this phone might not be for you.
I say "going back" because a few years ago I got a lot of mileage out of a smaller smartphone — quite literally, since I was able to carry the thing in hand or strap it to my arm during long outdoor runs and it never felt ridiculous. We had some good times, me and the iPhone 5s. It was nice and light, but its carved edges made it feel durable. It fit easily in my back pocket when I was carrying grocery bags, out shooting photos, or doing just about anything else that required manual dexterity.
WE HAD SOME GOOD TIMES, ME AND IPHONE 5S
Back then, I made fun of phablets. Hard. I wrote a breakup letter to the Samsung Galaxy Note 2 using the phone’s stylus, and said that another 6.6-inch smartphone would probably need to be transported in a flatbed truck. Even a 5.2-inch LG G2 felt too big for me. Who needs a phone this big?
Then things changed. It’s hard to say whether it was just the phones themselves that changed or if it was my own eventual acceptance of them; likely it was both. Overbearingly large phones have reached an elegance in design and level of technical prowess that weren’t there a couple years ago. Case in point: Samsung's Galaxy S7 Edge. "Phablets," with their long-lasting batteries and better cameras, are now widely accepted, while phones with 4.7-inch displays have become the new normal.
That’s why switching to the new iPhone SE, with its 4-inch display, feels so strange, both conceptually and practically. Size does matter for some people. In today’s culture we are imbued with the principle that "bigger" is better, and "thinner" is better, but "smaller" might not be.
When I first picked up the iPhone SE the other day and started emailing and iMessaging, I noticed a few things. First, this looks just like the iPhone 5s! Also, I could text with one hand again! And finally, I really do suck at touchscreen typing. Typing on a small keyboard again felt awkward and it took me four tries to correctly enter a password or even just send a quick response to someone. Tweeting felt… risky? All of my apps or app buckets were now squeezed into five rows per page rather than six, pushing some of them over onto the next page.
Oh, and my eyesight has gotten worse. If my recently-adjusted prescription wasn’t enough proof, the iPhone SE is, because I strained to see everything from messages to Maps to photos. (I mistook a photo of someone wearing a VR headset for someone else entirely.)
To that point, big phones are great for media consumption. I regularly watch videos, and read breaking news updates, saved Instapaper articles, and Kindle books on my 4.7-inch phone. But I'm not sure I’ll be reading books on the iPhone SE. Swiping through photos and social media on the iPhone SE was fine, but reading super-long emails on a small screen felt like I was reading them on an actual scroll.
WITH A LARGE PHONE YOU CAN DO SO MUCH, WHICH MEANS YOU ARE ALWAYS DOING SO MUCH
But maybe that has actually been the best part of going back to a small phone: I don’t feel as immersed in it as I do with a larger phone. With a large phone you can do so much, which means you are always doing so much. Yesterday, during a five-minute cab ride, I took a breather, because doing any kind of "meaningful" work on a tiny phone would be annoying anyway.
This isn’t meant to be full review of the new iPhone SE, because as I said, I still think that the people who will be most interested in this are first-time iPhone users or those who are already using a 4s or 5s. There’s still a lot more to say about the iPhone SE beyond, "It’s hard to go back." This is just my experience switching to the new iPhone SE from a larger phone, and personally, I'm likely to go back to a larger phone. But a small screen really makes you feel like you’re not quite as committed to it — and for some people, maybe that will be the point.
Source:theverge
Opinion: Why Apple is likely to end up paying that estimated $8B European back-tax bill – and more
The
European Union warned us this week not to expect
a speedy conclusion to the long-running investigation into the legality of Apple’s tax arrangements in
Europe. The delay follows a decision back in December to
expand the scope of the investigation.
But while
the wheels of EU tax investigations may grind exceedingly slowly, I’d be
willing to wager quite large sums of money on the final outcome. It looks to me
increasingly clear that Apple’s tax arrangements with the Irish government are
going to be declared illegal, and that Apple is going to be faced with a
significant bill for unpaid tax …
Let’s start with the basics
of how the whole situation arose in the first place. You can skip this
section if you’re already up to speed on the background.
In a
simple world, one of two things would happen when I buy an iPhone in the UK.
Either the Apple Store in London sends the money back to Cupertino, and Apple
pays U.S. tax on it there, or the money is paid into an Apple UK bank account,
and Apple pays tax on it in Britain. In reality, however, neither of these
things happens – and there are two reasons for that.
First,
every country in the world sets its own corporate tax rates – the percentage
tax a company pays on its profits. In the USA, the federal corporate tax
rate is 35%. In the UK, it’s 20%, so Apple would already be better off paying
UK tax on British sales. But it realized it could do better than that if
it shopped around.
Ireland
has one of the lowest rates of corporate tax in Europe, at 12.5%. By
establishing a European headquarters in Ireland, and sending all the money from
sales across Europe there, it could pay a lot less tax. But it doesn’t end
there.
Ireland
sets its corporate tax so low because it wants global companies to establish
their European headquarters there. That creates jobs, and pumps money into the
local economy. The bigger the company, the greater the benefit to the economy.
So for very large companies – like Apple and Google – Ireland offered them a special deal (reportedly
brokered by Steve Jobs). ‘Choose Ireland for your European HQ,’ it said,
‘and you only have to pay 2.5% tax.’ That’s five times lower than the rate paid
by most companies.
So rather
than pay 35% for sending the money back to the USA, or 20% for keeping it in
the UK, Apple funnels all sales from European countries into Ireland – and pays
just 2.5% tax on the lot.
I should stress that all this is
perfectly legal … for Apple. Apple’s legal obligation is to pay the tax each
country demands from it. If Ireland demands only 2.5%, Apple’s only duty in law
is to smile broadly and write the check. (Ok, it isn’t actually legally
required to grin as it does so, but it would be hard not to, right?)
This
was what allowed Tim Cook to truthfully tell a
Congressional hearing into Apple’s tax affairs that “we pay every dollar that
we owe.” Apple does indeed pay every dollar, or Euro, it is required to. The
company has broken no laws.
But the
same is probably not true of the Irish government. Ireland is a member of
the European Union, and there are laws determining what member states can and
cannot do where corporate taxes are concerned. Precisely because the EU knows
countries might be tempted to offer special deals to large companies, and
because it doesn’t want a race to the bottom where those companies end up
paying next to nothing in tax, it specifically outlaws them.
Special
deals offered only to certain companies are known as state aid, and that’s
illegal.
State aid is any
advantage granted by public authorities through state resources on a selective
basis to any organisations that could potentially distort competition and trade
in the European Union (EU).
While we’ll need to await the
outcome of the investigation before we know whether Ireland’s deal with Apple
is formally found to be illegal state aid, it’s hard to see how it could not
be.
‘Any
advantage’ – check. A tax rate of 2.5% instead of 12.5% is one hell of an
advantage.‘through state resources’ – check. The deal was struck with the Irish
tax authorities.
‘on a selective basis’ – check.
Apple got a deal, as did other large companies like Google and Microsoft. Mama
and Papa’s Pizza Place, not so much.‘distort competition and trade’ – check.
When one company pays one fifth of the tax rate paid by competitors, that
massively distorts competition.
And similar
deals in Belgium,
Luxembourg and the Netherlands have already been declared illegal. So the
case that Ireland broke the law seems to me cut-and-dried: it did.
I said earlier that Apple hasn’t
broken the law, which means it’s not on the hook for penalties or charges. But
it is on the hook for the difference between the tax it actually paid and the
tax it should have paid. Which is the difference between 2.5% and 12.5%. On all
of the revenue Apple funnelled through Ireland from the whole of Europe. For
ten years. That’s a lot of money.
Apple
last year told
shareholders that it was
unable to say just how much money that would amount to, only that it would be a
‘material’ amount – where ‘material’ is finance-speak for ‘a shedload.’
If the European Commission were
to conclude against Ireland, the European Commission could require Ireland to
recover from the Company past taxes covering a period of up to 10 years
reflective of the disallowed state aid. While such amount could be material, as
of March 28, 2015 the Company is unable to estimate the impact.
But that
hasn’t stopped others doing the sums. Bloomberg estimated the total tax
liability at more than $8B.
But Apple’s potential European
tax liabilities don’t necessarily end there. A number of European
countries have questioned the legality of Apple funneling profits from sales in
their country back to Ireland. Those countries believe Apple should be paying
tax in the country where the sales were made.
Some
European countries have done more than question the arrangements: they
have flat out rejected them. Italy, for example, last year accused Apple of
failing to declare more than $1.3B of income earned from 16 Italian Apple
Stores, and presented the company with an additional tax bill for €318M ($347M). Apple paid up.
If other
European countries do the same, it could face similar bills from countries
across Europe, with the total potentially running into more than a billion
dollars, taking that $8B estimate to upwards of $9B.
In comments
on past pieces on this topic, some have questioned the fairness of Apple being
asked to pay more tax than was demanded at the time. If Apple paid what was
asked of it, they argued, surely it’s unfair to come asking for more later? But
the position for Apple is no different to that of you or I. If the IRS or HMRC
makes a mistake in calculating our personal taxes, it doesn’t let us off when
that error comes to light. It might offer us an apology and time to pay, but
we’d still have to fork over the cash. The same is true of Apple.
Finally, if you’re in any
doubt about the eventual outcome of the investigation, you need to consider the
politics. At a time when European economies are – like the U.S. one – still
struggling, there is enormous public anger at the idea of large companies being
able to get away with paying less than their fair share of tax.
A deal
struck between Google and the British government, where the company paid just £130M ($185M) for back taxes covering ten years was roundly condemned not just by the public but by
Britain’s own public spending watchdog – and is itself likely to be investigated by
the European Commission. Starbucks had
to change its own accounting system so that it stopped funneling most of the
profits from its UK coffee shops back to offshore accounts after being faced by
customer boycotts. Amazon too
had to agree to pay UK tax on sales to UK customers in the face of public
anger.
So my
view is that both the law and the public mood is clear. Apple is likely on
the hook to hand over more than $9B in back taxes – or around three times the amount it paid for its largest
ever acquisition, Beats. That’s got to sting. But with cash reserves of around
$200B in the bank, perhaps not too much.
Source: 9to5mac
Majority of Americans Think Apple Should Unlock iPhone For FBI
The Pew Research Center recently conducted a survey where it asked people if the tech giant should unlock the iPhone used by one of the suspects in the San Bernardino terrorist attacks for the FBI.Fifty-one percent of respondents said Apple should cooperate with the FBI, unlocking the iPhone in question, while only 38 percent said it shouldn't.
It seems like this is not an ideological or partisan issue. Fifty-five percent of the Democrats and 56 percent of the Republicans polled favored the Department of Justice and the FBI.
A factor that seemed to have a larger influence over the positions that Americans took was smartphone (especially iPhone) ownership. The chart below illustrates the stand of iPhone and smartphone owners on the Apple-FBI dispute.
In case you missed it,
check out CEO Tim Cook's open letter, where he makes a case
for Apple and the safety of personal data, and against the demands of the DoJ
and FBI.Disclosure: Javier Hasse holds no positions in any of the
securities mentioned above.
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