Follow Slashdot stories on Twitter

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Blackberry Encryption Businesses EU Iphone Operating Systems Privacy Security Software United States Apple News Hardware Technology

BlackBerry CEO 'Disturbed' By Apple's Hard Line On Encryption (theinquirer.net) 202

An anonymous reader writes: BlackBerry CEO John Chen said he is "disturbed" by Apple's tough approach to encryption and user privacy, warning that the firm's attitude is harmful to society. Earlier this year, Chen said in response to Apple resisting the government's demands to unlock an iPhone belonging to one of the San Bernardino shooters: "We are indeed in a dark place when companies put their reputations above the greater good." During BlackBerry's Security Summit in New York this week, Chen made several more comments about Apple's stance on encryption. "One of our competitors, we call it 'the other fruit company,' has an attitude that it doesn't matter how much it might hurt society, they're not going to help," he said. "I found that disturbing as a citizen. I think BlackBerry, like any company, should have a basic civil responsibility. If the world is in danger, we should be able to help out." He did say there was a lot of "nonsense" being reported about BlackBerry and its approach to how it handles user information. "Of course, there need to be clear guidelines. The guidelines we've adopted require legal assets. A subpoena for certain data. But if you have the data, you should give it to them," he said. "There's some complete nonsense about what we can and can't do. People are mad at us that we let the government have the data. It's absolute garbage. We can't do that." Chen also warned that mandatory back doors aren't a good idea either, hinting at the impending Investigatory Powers Bill. "There's proposed legislation in the U.S., and I'm sure it will come to the EU, that every vendor needs to provide some form of a back door. That is not going to fly at all. It just isn't," he said.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

BlackBerry CEO 'Disturbed' By Apple's Hard Line On Encryption

Comments Filter:
  • Fuck blackberry (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday July 20, 2016 @07:16PM (#52550635)

    Glad their insecure piece of shit platform is nearly dead

  • by Edis Krad ( 1003934 ) on Wednesday July 20, 2016 @07:16PM (#52550639)

    "We are indeed in a dark place when companies put their reputations above the greater good."

    I guess Mr. Chen and Mr. Cook have very different ideas of what the greater good is.

    • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday July 20, 2016 @07:22PM (#52550673)

      BB is a failed company. They failed to anticipate the market, and they failed to adapt. Their last gasp is to tear down what others have built with nonsensical arguments in favor of more government surveillance.

      Apparently, the US government doesn't agree. Witness SOCOM purchasing iPhones in a recent Slashdot article.

      • I wouldn't say they failed to anticipate the market. The problem was Apple changed the playing field.
        Pre-iPhone smart phones were about typing. Blackberry was king with there keyboard and pointer it made it a superior smart phone for the market however this keyboard sacrificed screen space. Apple giving a multitouch screen and no keyboard showed that they could allow useful communication with more screen space. This trade off from Apple could had bombed but it didn't making blackberry innovations seem o

        • I wouldn't say they failed to anticipate the market. The problem was Apple changed the playing field. Pre-iPhone smart phones were about typing. Blackberry was king with there keyboard and pointer it made it a superior smart phone for the market however this keyboard sacrificed screen space. Apple giving a multitouch screen and no keyboard showed that they could allow useful communication with more screen space. This trade off from Apple could had bombed but it didn't making blackberry innovations seem out of date.

          Damn, I would have loved to have had you on my opposing debate teams in high school, since you don't even know how to defend your point of view.

          When Apple "changed the playing field" they changed the market, which BB failed to anticipate. By the time BB did react to the market change. it was too late.

          So, yes, BB absolutely "failed to anticipate the market".

    • by Kobun ( 668169 ) on Wednesday July 20, 2016 @07:23PM (#52550677)
      Indeed. I'd also like to hear how Mr. Chen proposes to follow his vision of the greater good, where he has access to everyone's data and will hand it over for any trumped-up warrant, without a backdoor in his soon-to-be-extinct Blackberry's.

      Or is he going to do the politician thing and define "backdoor" to mean something conveniently different than what Blackberry has.
      • by SirSlud ( 67381 )

        If any warrant can be trumped up, the logical end point is that you don't believe in warrants to begin with.

        • If any warrant can be trumped up, the logical end point is that you don't believe in warrants to begin with.

          No, absolutely not. The logical endpoint is that a warrant is a tool that can be used for either good or evil. All tools should be evaluated on a case by case basis. If your logic was true, it would mean nobody could own a screwdriver or a frying pan. Those tools have been used as a murder devices, so must always be a murder device.

      • hand it over for any trumped-up warrant, without a backdoor in his soon-to-be-extinct Blackberry's.

        I see what you did there...

    • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Wednesday July 20, 2016 @07:46PM (#52550809)
      economically. Not at his income level. There's little doubt he's got a healthy golden parachute. Being afraid for things like surveillance generally requires quite a bit of economic insecurity. You have to believe the world can and will turn on you at some point, which is an odd thought to have if you've spent all or most of your adult life without worrying about money. It's an entirely different outlook on life you'd only get from a member of the ruling class. The 20th century equivalent to "Let them eat cake".
      • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday July 20, 2016 @09:23PM (#52551255)

        Chen's argument is also an irrelevant straw man ,

        Apple has provided all relevant data it has when presented with a valid warrant.

        However, by increasing use of PKI & end to end encryption ,Apple has been moving towards a point where that data it has is getting less and less, and may eventually be so little it's irrelevant to asking for.

        What Apple has resisted is reversing that direction.

        His argument is politically appealing to factions within government who want back doors, but as government, would you want YOUR devices to have a back door that a foreign government could access on presenting a warrant ?

        Apples position is essentially, we want to sell you a phone - access to your data is between you and who ever is asking for it.

        Blackberry's position is they want to sell you a phone, and then will give your data to whomever it is politically expedient to do so.

        I'll take the "other fruit company" thank you.

        • Apples position is essentially, we want to sell you a phone - access to your data is between you and who ever is asking for it.

          Which is a laudable position, indeed.

    • I think the more salient point is that no one even gives a damn what Mr. Chen thinks anymore. He's running a company that's probably within a year of killing its hardware business, and whose big plan for turning things around is to become YAAM (Yet Another Android Manufacturer). At some point they're going to run out of money, and just as importantly, out of assets to sell, and then Mr. Chen will doubtless be on to "save" some other company (though really, he was given the impossible task of reversing half

      • He's just saying that because Blackberry (then RIM or Research In Motion), after making a big hype about how secure they were, gave the keys to Saudi Rrabis, the United Arab Emerites, and the RCMP [huffingtonpost.ca]

        Just days after BlackBerry’s CEO stressed the company's network has no back doors for law enforcement, a news report alleges the RCMP obtained the ability to decrypt communications on BlackBerry devices.

        Vice reports that the RCMP was able to crack PIN-to-PIN messages related to Operation Clemenza, a large-scale probe into organized crime in Quebec. The investigation launched in 2010 and resulted in dozens of arrests in 2014.

        The RCMP isn’t keeping it a secret that it used BlackBerry communications to crack the case. It states on its website that its use of these messages marked “the first time that this technique was used on such a large scale in a major investigation” in North America.

        "Over one million private messages were intercepted and analyzed as evidence using the PIN to PIN interception technique," the RCMP said.

        But according to Vice, court documents show the RCMP had access to a BlackBerry decryption key — a piece of code that would allow any communications between two BlackBerry devices to be hacked and read.

        Having caved in, he's doubling down rather than admitting he should have refused, fought in court, and pulled service out of countries that demanded access.

        • by mark-t ( 151149 )
          pulling service out of your own home country from which you are primarily based can often be infeasible unless you have enough international physical presence, and no strong dependence on any foreign head office, to easily relocate
          • And what was keeping them from challenging the RCMP in the courts - both the court of law and the court of public opinion? Apple won both of those battles.
            • by mark-t ( 151149 )

              I believe it was a provincial supreme court that demanded that Blackberry cooperate with the RCMP. While they could have theoretically challenged that and taken it to the SCC, given Canada's overall political climate and typical government stance on such matters, it is very unlikely that a higher court would have reversed that decision. All that would have happened is that Blackberry would have had to spend more money defending themselves and delayed the outcome by perhaps a few months to a year or so.

            • And what was keeping them from challenging the RCMP in the courts - both the court of law and the court of public opinion? Apple won both of those battles.

              EXACTLY.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday July 20, 2016 @07:17PM (#52550641)

    Blackberry's CEO is just positioning itself as the cocksucker for governments.
    Anything for some more contracts, I guess. They need whatever they can get.

    • by TheEyes ( 1686556 ) on Wednesday July 20, 2016 @07:25PM (#52550695)

      Blackberry's CEO is just positioning itself as the cocksucker for governments.
      Anything for some more contracts, I guess. They need whatever they can get.

      A bit ironic, as part of the reason for Blackberry's decline is that businesses can't trust they won't hand over their secure communications to whatever entity asks for it.

    • by Tablizer ( 95088 )

      Agreed!

      It's obviously political grandstanding based on this quote alone: "We are indeed in a dark place when companies put their reputations above the greater good."

      Apple has stated it puts all users ("greater good") at risk to find or create a back-door. Even if the BlackBerry CEO disagrees with the weight of one risk against the other (potentially solving crimes now versus creating more in the future), he should give Apple the benefit of the doubt in terms of internal motivation, and simply say, "I disagr

    • by MightyMartian ( 840721 ) on Wednesday July 20, 2016 @07:58PM (#52550851) Journal

      But even governments are abandoning Blackberry devices, and since he's just turning Blackberry into an Android maker, he's lost most of what differentiated BB from everyone else. At this point, it looks like a guy with a horse drawn carriage who he's strapped a gas engine to shaking his fists at the sports cars.

      • But even governments are abandoning Blackberry devices, and since he's just turning Blackberry into an Android maker, he's lost most of what differentiated BB from everyone else.

        Well, they've still got their keyboards. It didn't keep them market leader like they hoped, but since pretty much nobody else has them any more, it could keep them afloat.

        • It hasn't even given them enough sales to break even. The number of people looking for keyboards on phones is so small it's hard to call it even a niche.

  • Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Wednesday July 20, 2016 @07:18PM (#52550647)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Don't kid yourself. It is possible for the government + corporations to ban things. For example they can lock down a device so you can't add unapproved software to it. Don't think that is possible? It already is on some devices. All they need is a law to not let you connect to the Internet with a non-locked down device. That is coming eventually anyway.
      • by Z80a ( 971949 )

        I think it's quite impossible to stop markets from happening.
        Which is why besides their best efforts, its still easy to buy drugs for example.

        If there's a demand, someone will supply it.

        • It isn't impossible in this instance. Only a handful of tech companies control most core Internet access. This isn't drugs or guns.
          • by Z80a ( 971949 )

            Well yes, but as soon they ban, people will at very least crack the devices and create a whole huge parallel market of either cracking software or hardware to sideload programs, as it happens with the game consoles right now.

          • Comment removed based on user account deletion
            • Of course that is possible. It is just a technical issue solved by software. Just like you can't provision a cable modem in your house without authorization from the upstream ISP. The ISPs could just declare that you need to use "authorized" cable modems to connect to the Internet and reject all non-authorized one. This is coming already.
              • And what does that accomplish? My modem isn't doing the relevant encryption, my computer is. If the data ever leaves my device unencrypted, then its security is already broken. The modem (or ISP's routers) wouldn't just have to have back doors in their own encryption, they'd have to be able to detect preexisting encryption within the data stream they're given to transport and refuse to transmit it - which can be made an arbitrarily difficult task by disguising encrypted traffic as insecure communications

            • Even blocking encrypted content would be a losing game - you can just bury the encryption within a layer of steganography and make it arbitrarily difficult to detect. Maybe not suited to downloading the latest season of [insert show here], but amply viable for the sort of communications used to justify building in backdoors.

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • You wouldn't need to re-engineer the entire internet, just the edges. it is definitely doable, and eventually it will be done I believe. The excuse will be child porn/terrorism/piracy/etc...
    • Encryption doesn't help when they also send a copy to government servers that is encrypted with the government's key. Not hard to push out in a software update.
    • John Chen is a bit like gun prohibitionists.

      You mean he's a red herring?

    • Apple is smart enough to realize this. They understand that throwing their users under the bus now will not make us safer later.

      And it's important to point out that Apple maintained that stance at no small danger to themselves and their reputation. During that whole FBI thing, there were several Congresscritters that were calling Apple "Aligning with Terrists" and "Intentionally Marketing to Terrists" (really! I heard it myself on C-SPAN), and worse.

      And this was in the country that the company was located (USA); so, to the person that said that BB had no choice but to give the RCMP the Keys to the Kingdom because it is located in

  • by kamapuaa ( 555446 ) on Wednesday July 20, 2016 @07:21PM (#52550669) Homepage

    I wish they could have gotten the CEO of Pan Am, Zenith, or RCA to speak up on the subject.

  • I'm disturbed... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by DiSKiLLeR ( 17651 ) on Wednesday July 20, 2016 @07:24PM (#52550689) Homepage Journal

    I'm disturbed by BlackBerry's stance on the situation.

    Under no circumstances should backdoors be allowed.

  • I'm disturbed by his "non-tough" approach. I hope CTOs reading this draw the right conclusions.

  • by BlueCoder ( 223005 ) on Wednesday July 20, 2016 @07:30PM (#52550723)

    And they use to have such a good rep... oh well, someone flush the toilet.

    Apple did what they should do for encryption. They refused to release a signed version of their firmware that would allow any phone with that firmware to be brute force cracked. Even if they took the actual phone into their possession and loaded the special firmware themselves only on that phone it would mean tens of thousands of requests from law enforcement and courts all over the world. They couldn't say no to any of them. A logistical nightmare that doesn't make Apple any money; break even at best but with lots of negative press.

    It's a no win situation. And you can be sure that further into the future they will endeavor to make it impossible for even them to crack their own phones no matter what firmware the device uses.

    Didn't you hear? The USA just bought a ton of apple phones for military special forces.

  • BB apparently depends on government business for a large fraction of its' income. This is just "dancing to the piper's tune."

    Chen appears to be siding with his major "customer," to forego his failure at making a product that non-governmental customers want to buy. He is also apparently wholly ignorant of constitutional rights to privacy in the U.S., as outlined by Alan Westin's seminal and masterful "Privacy and Freedom" (1967).

  • "Of course, there need to be clear guidelines"

    Dear Mr. Chen: There is no such thing as encryption with a back door. That's the guideline moron.

    • All we have to do is to ask Mr. Chen to put all his valuables in this super-secure electronic safe. Of course it has a backdoor. But he won't mind (at least until the next time he opens it)....
  • Seriously. It's already known that your company basically already sold its own encryption keys, and thus isn't a trustworthy platform anymore.

    Stop trying to curry favor. Your company crashed. You're essentially obsolete. Your heyday ain't coming back.

    So please, all you're doing is shaming yourself further, to make a buck.

    What's next? Prostituting your own children for money?

    • What's next? Prostituting your own children for money?

      Blackberry's been around quite a while, and there's no whore like an old whore (or so I'm told).

  • 196 "back doors" (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Vitriol+Angst ( 458300 ) on Wednesday July 20, 2016 @07:40PM (#52550781)

    Every country will eventually NEED to get access to that data. It's far more likely to be used to squash liberty than to solve the cases for 3 or 4 bad guys. If you need to hack a phone to catch someone, you are fishing. The dumb criminals of course will leave the evidence there -- but also everywhere else. The terrorist cell however, will use a burner phone or a damn pigeon.

    America will not get more secure by more spying, but by stronger communities and job opportunities. Every one of these attacks is coming from a loner.

  • Well ... (Score:5, Funny)

    by mattyj ( 18900 ) on Wednesday July 20, 2016 @07:40PM (#52550783)

    "I guess I won't be using this Blackberry any more." - Everyone in 2008

  • this is like a fly telling you not to flush your shit as its for the greater good of fly society to leave the turd in the bowl.

  • It's Official (Score:5, Interesting)

    by jshackney ( 99735 ) on Wednesday July 20, 2016 @07:49PM (#52550827) Homepage

    1) BB just died with Mr. Chen's comments.
    2) Thank the Flying Spaghetti Monster that Apple has integrity*. Not a huge fanboi, it pains me terribly to say that.

    *on the matter of encryption/privacy.

  • Show them you're belly. How anyone could believe that is beyond me. I bet if someone doxed his ass he would be outraged and scream about his privacy.

  • The "greater good" is for people to disclose their own privacy.
  • I am disturbed by Blackberry's hard line stance, and consider it harmful to society.

  • by SeaFox ( 739806 ) on Wednesday July 20, 2016 @09:46PM (#52551365)

    "I think BlackBerry, like any company, should have a basic civil responsibility. If the world is in danger, we should be able to help out." ...
    Chen also warned that mandatory back doors aren't a good idea either.

    I'd like to hear Chen's idea of how he can accomplish access to encrypted data without the user's consent while not having a back door.
    I suppose he doesn't count the vendor having the user's key and using it without permission as "unauthorized access".

  • If the world is in danger, we should be able to help out.

    That's a big 'if'. Terrorism doesn't kill anybody, statistically speaking (and that's not to say I don't feel sad for all the statistical anomalies in Nice, etc, but let's keep it in perspective), so it should not be something to be afraid of. Governments around the world are using it as a control measure over the population. That's what they always do. Encryption thwarts that control in a minor way, that's why they're scared of it.

    I think this
    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      Actually, the world is increasingly in danger from the severe (and intended) side-effects of "fighting" terrorism. (No, mass surveillance does not help against terrorism, as the last few cases have very well demonstrated.) Hence "helping out" would actually mean helping to stop the raising fascism in the west. But no, they cheer it onwards. This has happened before and last time the result was a global catastrophe.

  • by EmperorOfCanada ( 1332175 ) on Wednesday July 20, 2016 @11:14PM (#52551711)
    My long time complaint has been that Blackberry was very abusive and disregarded the desires of its users. They would allow telcos to molest their products to maintain a "good" relationship with the telcos. They would allow IT departments to molest their products to maintain a "good" relationship with the IT departments, and now they seem to want the jackbooted thugs who run our secret police to molest their products, but for what?

    They let other people turn their phones into turds an the market spoke.

    Now he is whining because Apple won't turn their phones into turds on the behest of some bunch of assholes.

    The telcos put blackberries onto the bottom shelf the second the iPhone came along, the IT departments switched to everything else, and the jackbooted thugs will probably treat BB with the same respect. This makes me smile.

    For those who aren't Canadian, BB epitomizes everything that the rest of Canada hates about central Canada (where RIM is located). This unrelenting bowing to authority. This treating of the people as peasants who don't know what is best for themselves. A pseudo intellectual belief that the rest of the world will somehow come around to their delusions and make it their reality.
  • by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Thursday July 21, 2016 @05:11AM (#52552595)

    We alienated our customer base by handing out their privacy and now they should damn well, too!

  • "We are indeed in a dark place when companies put their reputations above the greater good."

    If it were truly for the greater good, perhaps they wouldn't be risking their reputations. The thing is, the authorities have proven themselves to be untrustworthy. They define "bad guys" as not only those who wish to harm people, but also those they deem to be threats to the System or the status quo. So while we can all agree that we want to know what's on the phone of a mass murderer, we should be more circumspe

  • Who on their right mind will use their products now?
  • It's OUR data, not yours, and CERTAINLY not the Government's.
  • one of BlackBerry's selling points was that they were secure end to end and even they could not see messages being transferred through their NOC by enterprise customers who had their own keys installed on BES?

    Apple's stand on encryption is the correct one. You can't backdoor encryption and have only the "good guys" have access.

    Anyone who believes that is a realistic possibility is idiotic.

  • One thing to keep in mind in line with Chen's comments is that Canada has some of the best privacy legislation in the world. Sure it has issues, and has been challenged politically in recent years under the guise of terrorism and protecting children, but in the end it survives and is pretty powerful. So from his perspective in Canada his point of view is pretty consistent and has merit. However is the US, it is a bit of a different story. In much of the world it is even more so. India is one example people

  • Is this guy on Apple's payroll or something? To my ears, he might as well be begging me not to buy BlackBerry. (Do they even sell phones anymore?)

Let's organize this thing and take all the fun out of it.

Working...