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Encryption Government Privacy Security United States Apple

Tim Cook Defends Apple's Approach To Security: 'Encryption is Inherently Great' (businessinsider.com) 198

Apple CEO Tim Cook has once again defended his company's hardline approach to security. At Utah Tech Tour event while taking questions from the audience, Cook said, (via BusinessInsider):"This is one of the biggest issues that we face. Encryption is what makes the public safe. As you know, there are people kept alive because the grid is up. If our grid goes down, if there was a grid attack, the public's safety is at risk" -- hence the need for encryption to protect it. "You can imagine defence systems need encryption, because there are a few bad actors in the world who might like to attack those. [...] Some people have tried to make it out to be bad," the chief executive told the audience at the Utah question-and-answer session. "Encryption is inherently great, and we would not be a safe society without it. So this is an area that is very, very important for us... as you can tell from our actions earlier this year, we throw all of ourselves into this." he added. "We're very much standing on principle here."
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Tim Cook Defends Apple's Approach To Security: 'Encryption is Inherently Great'

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  • Correction (Score:5, Insightful)

    by ClickOnThis ( 137803 ) on Monday October 03, 2016 @10:28AM (#53004397) Journal

    Encryption is insanely great.

    FTFY, Tim.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday October 03, 2016 @10:34AM (#53004421)

    I'm no fan of Apple in general but on this point, no matter what their true motivations, the point is correct. Encryption *is* great, and required for today's society to operate securely. As Bruce Schneier said, we can either have security for everyone, or for none. The math just doesn't allow back doors that only work for "the good guys" (and there's no one definition of who those are, so it's a doubly-flawed premise.)

    • On the occasions when I have a discussion about things I just point out that if I were a thief I'd always prefer the back door.

    • I suspect that liability is one of Apple's motivations. They don't want to be responsible for being the custodian of all of their customers' data.

      • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

        I suspect that liability is one of Apple's motivations. They don't want to be responsible for being the custodian of all of their customers' data.

        Yes, and that's why Apple's also one to not offer "cloud everything". A lot of services rely on iCloud yes, but there's plenty that doesn't and Apple has even been moving stuff off from iCloud and into personal computation.

        It's not just encryption, but just not having the data period. So an iCloud backup is easy and convenient, but is not a full iPhone backup - it

        • Yes, and that's why Apple's also one to not offer "cloud everything". A lot of services rely on iCloud yes, but there's plenty that doesn't and Apple has even been moving stuff off from iCloud and into personal computation.

          Part of it is that iCloud simply cannot logistically hold all of the customer's data. Like my music collection easily exceeds iCloud storage space and I'm not the most ardent music collector.

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      I fully agree. Just one (minor) correction: The Math does allow backdoors that only work for the "good"/bad guys, but reality does not because it means keeping an encryption key absolutely secret long-term while it is also frequently used. Not even the NSA can apparently manage that. And if it fails, the effects are catastrophic.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday October 03, 2016 @10:44AM (#53004471)

    We've had Yahoo creditials stolen, NSA hacks stolen, Blackberry is near bankrupt over its backdoors. The argument FOR backdoors have crumbled, so is it really necessary at this point to defend encryption?

    If everyone had backdoored as the NSA/CIA chiefs wanted, then Russian+Chinese hackers would own everything at this point, and not just NSA hacks. They'd demonstrated by their incompetence the need for strong encryption, everywhere for everything.

    Is anyone suggesting for example, that voting machines should be backdoored? That to me is the big risk now, an election with electronic voting machines susceptible to domestic and foreign bad actors.

    • The argument FOR backdoors have crumbled, so is it really necessary at this point to defend encryption?

      Every day there is another call from this or that government to backdoor or ban encryption. Often it is made with the claim that it will prevent terrorism. There are few voices supporting encryption. If Apple can make it fashionable, by all means, let us not dissuade them.

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      We've had Yahoo creditials stolen, NSA hacks stolen, Blackberry is near bankrupt over its backdoors. The argument FOR backdoors have crumbled, so is it really necessary at this point to defend encryption?

      To experts and reasonably well-informed citizens, it is not. To the rest (which is the majority), it still is and Tim Cook is performing a valuable public service with his stance, no matter that it also benefits Apple.

  • Encryption is merely a component of Security, which is best labeled as a double-edged sword. Always has been. Always will be.

    • No, encryption is not a sword. Encryption is chain mail. Encryption is a passive defensive bulwark. Encryption protects you against people with swords.
      • No, encryption is not a sword. Encryption is chain mail. Encryption is a passive defensive bulwark. Encryption protects you against people with swords.

        Encryption is merely a tool in the toolbox of Security. That is all. Don't try and glamorize it any more than Cook tried to.

        Yes, encryption is "inherently great"; for both the law-abiding citizen who is merely looking for privacy, as well as the cold-blooded murderer hell-bent on keeping their evil plan secret.

        Hence, my double-edged analogy stands, as it does with the Security toolbox in general. Always has been. Always will be.

        • by pnutjam ( 523990 )
          That's a shitty analogy, that's like saying fences are a double edged sword. Don't try to defend it.
          • That's a shitty analogy, that's like saying fences are a double edged sword. Don't try to defend it.

            Security is a double-edged sword because it can cut both ways. Too much of it, or too little of it, can ultimately hurt you or your organization.

            Government thinks Security is too much when encryption is used to hide "evil" communications.

            Citizens think Security is too little when encryption backdoors are created to uncover all communications.

            Hope that breaks it down well enough for you to not try and counter with a shitty analogy next time.

            • by pnutjam ( 523990 )
              A sword is offensive, security is defensive. It does not cut, it prevents you from being cut.
              • A sword is offensive, security is defensive. It does not cut, it prevents you from being cut.

                Swords can be used to attack and defend against an attack. The sword analogy focuses on the ability of specifically a double-edged sword that can cut both ways, not solely on the application. My previous explanation broke this down quite simply with the catch-22 scenario anyone can be put in when applying too much or too little security. I'm done breaking this down any further.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Privacy is great too, but we are making a lot of money from yours so we will just ignore that one.

  • Tim Cook thinks the same thing iPhone buyers think.
  • If our founding father's had been hacked by Britain, we would all be speaking with a British accent.

  • Both are sharp and bleeding. You cannot (really) fight for privacy and for control at the same time.
    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      You can _claim_ to be defending freedom and establish strict control at the same time though. Just look at North Korea. Or the US.

  • Having witnessed the Obama Administration spying on AP reporters [wikipedia.org] and exploiting government agencies as political intimidation tools [nationalreview.com], encryption suddenly became a prime must-have for my computers. Government should NOT be intimidating political opposition and I don't want to be targeted for my lawful communications. When government cites criminal monitoring as a justification to hack into devices, I am skeptical knowing their history of intimidating lawful citizens. When Apple flipped the bird at the FBI
  • The only reason he's sided with it is solely for the well-heeled - he doesn't wan't another embarrassment.

    That, and it doesn't hurt him too much to prevent people from having too much freedom on their devices.

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