Apples vs the FBI
I am the most ardent defender of all
democratic rights.
I am in favour of the right to a
citizen's privacy, a right to free speech, a free press, and all the
other rights which go along with the ideal of Democracy.
I believe also that these rights bring
with them certain responsibilities.
Assume that from the window of my bed
room I observe the commission of a heinous crime, say, a multiple
murder, and I am the only witness to this deed. It is my information
only which can assist the police in solving this crime.
Do I then have the right to refuse to
supply this information to the investigators ? Do I have the right to
insist that this might be an infringement of my own right to privacy?
Or do I have a moral obligation, a responsibility to assist the
investigating services ?
I most certainly feel the weight of an
obligation to act in common with my society's protectors.
I shall be obliged to give them as good
a description of the criminal or criminals as I am capable of giving.
Now to the Case:
Two terrorists attacked the Inland
Regional Centre in San Bernardino, California, and in the process they
killed 14 persons and injured 22 more.
Regional police forces apprehended the
killers, who in turn were killed in a shoot-out.
During further investigations, the
Federal Buro of Investigations, (FBI) came into possession of an I-Phone, in which they suspected to
find electronic data helpful in solving this and/ preventing other,
similar crimes.
The FBI could, however, not crack the
security codes of this I-Phone.
They turned to Apple, the manufacturer
of this phone, for help in cracking these codes.
Apple, however, refused to assist the
FBI by claiming that it was their policy to never undermine the
security of their products.
What have we here ?
First we have a Federal Police
attempting to prevent further killings of innocent citizens, on hand
of information possibly stored in this telephone.
Secondly we have a privately owned
company, Apple, who is prepared to tolerate more terrorist attacks
and to tolerate further killings of innocent citizens, simply to
protect the inviolability of its product.
This is more than I, a sworn defender
of all Democratic Rights, can accept.
There must be legislation which makes
the refusal of assisting the Police in their efforts to solve an
already perpetrated crime and/or the forestalling of future criminal
activities, itself a crime.
Bertstravels
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