Once again, the FBI demands that a back door be opened for the iPhone against the background of the shooting that took place at a US Navy air base, but Apple refuses.

Back door for iPhone

And Apple will reject whatever the number of attempts to make a loophole in the iPhone because it believes that the privacy of its users is an acquired right that must be protected in various ways.


What's the story

In December 2019, three people were killed and others were wounded in a shooting attack at the Pensacola base of the US Navy, and during the attack, the shooter, a Saudi trainee named Muhammad Saeed Al-Shamrani, tried to destroy two iPhones he was in possession of before his death, but he did not succeed.

After the attacker was killed, both the FBI and the Justice Department requested that Apple help them and do everything in their power by creating a vulnerability or back door that allows them access to the attacker's iPhone data.


Apple responded

Back door for iPhone

The American company Apple said that it will not unlock the perpetrator's iPhone devices in order to protect users' privacy because trying to create a vulnerability will make iPhone users vulnerable to privacy risks.

Regarding the Pensacola base accident, the American company explained that it helped as much as possible by providing many gigabytes of data related to the perpetrator of the accident, and the data includes i-cloud backups, account information and transaction data for multiple accounts.

And Apple added that there is no such thing as a back door that only good people use and that those back doors can be exploited by bad people.


What will happen

Back door for iPhone

According to Andy Jarrett, CEO of investigations company Garrett Discovery, the FBI did not need to seek help from Apple, especially since the iPhones of the crash perpetrator were not the latest versions, as he had an iPhone 5 and an iPhone 7, and they can be easily penetrated thanks to the tools that The FBI has bought it within the last two years.

The US FBI had hired the Israeli company Cellebrite to decrypt the iPhone 5C of the San Bernardino attacker after Apple refused and the FBI spent more than a million dollars to access the data stored on the perpetrator's device and can do the same with the perpetrator of the air base accident, but this time it will not pay much Of the money that you have from the software you got from the Zionist company, you just need to ask for help from it and you might pay about $ 15 or less this time.

What do you think of what Apple did with the FBI and its strong insistence on protecting the privacy of its users? Share your opinion in the comments

Source:

idownloadblog

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