
In the midst of Apple’s legal battle with the FBI, there has been no shortage of tech leaders who have come out and applauded
Apple’s position on user privacy and its refusal to help the FBI bypass the iPhone’s security measures. From
Sundar Pichai
and Jack Dorsey to Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg, it almost seems as if
Tim Cook’s public letter last week has unified large segments of the
tech community behind a common cause.But
not every tech leader and luminary necessarily sees things from Apple’s
point of view. So while Tim Cook maintains helping the FBI would set a
dangerous precedent, Microsoft founder Bill Gates begs to differ.
DON’T MISS: Galaxy S7 vs. iPhone 6s: The 5 most important ways Samsung outshines AppleDuring a recent interview with the
Financial Times,
Gates challenged Tim Cook’s assessment that helping the FBI access the
San Bernardino shooter’s iPhone would be akin to establishing a backdoor
that would wreak havoc on user privacy.“This
is a specific case where the government is asking for access to
information,” Gates explained. “They are not asking for some general
thing, they are asking for a particular case. It is no different than
[the question of] should anybody ever have been able to tell the phone
company to get information, should anybody be able to get at bank
records. Let’s say the bank had tied a ribbon round the disk drive and
said ‘don’t make me cut this ribbon because you’ll make me cut it many
times’.”In a similar vein, FBI director James Comey recently
emphasized that
the software solution the FBI is seeking is narrow in scope and that
the agency doesn’t “want to break anyone’s encryption or set a master
key loose on the land.”Apple of course doesn’t quite see things that way. In an
FAQ published
on Apple’s website on Monday, the company specifically addressed the
argument raised by Gates, Comey and others who believe Apple should
accommodate the FBI’s demands.In
the physical world you can destroy something and it’s gone. But in the
digital world, the technique, once created, could be used over and over
again, on any number of devices.Law enforcement agents around
the country have already said they have hundreds of iPhones they want
Apple to unlock if the FBI wins this case. In the physical world, it
would be the equivalent of a master key, capable of opening hundreds of
millions of locks. Of course, Apple would do our best to protect that
key, but in a world where all of our data is under constant threat, it
would be relentlessly attacked by hackers and cybercriminals.
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