Please create an account to participate in the Slashdot moderation system

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Iphone Privacy Apple

Apple Repair Tech Posted Woman's Explicit iPhone Photos to Facebook (msn.com) 157

"Apple paid a multimillion dollar settlement to a woman after iPhone repair techs posted risque pictures from her phone to Facebook," reports the Washington Post, citing legal documents obtained by the Telegraph.

An unnamed Oregon college student "sent her phone to Apple for repairs after it stopped working" in 2016, and the iPhone ended up at Apple-approved repair contractor Pegatron... Two iPhone repair technicians in Sacramento, uploaded "10 photos of her in various stages of undress and a sex video" to her Facebook account, resulting in "severe emotional distress" for the young woman, according to the Telegraph's review of legal records. Pegatron, a major Apple manufacturer with facilities across the globe, had to reimburse Apple for the settlement and face insurers who didn't want to pay for it, according to the news outlet...

The settlement isn't the first time Apple has had to handle the misdeeds of employees. In 2019, a California woman alleged that an Apple store employee had texted a private picture on her phone to himself. That employee was no longer working for the company after Apple conducted its investigation. Apple store employees at a Brisbane, Australia, location were fired in 2016 for taking candid pictures of female employees and customers' bodies and stealing photos from consumers' phones to rank their bodies.

"Apple keeps a firm grip on the repair of its devices, arguing that allowing only approved retailers and vendors to repair its products ensures the privacy of its customers," the article points out.

"The revelation of the lawsuit pokes holes in the company's stance that only authorized retailers can keep customer information secure."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Apple Repair Tech Posted Woman's Explicit iPhone Photos to Facebook

Comments Filter:
  • Apple can pay (Score:3, Insightful)

    by fermion ( 181285 ) on Sunday June 13, 2021 @01:50PM (#61483282) Homepage Journal
    So the advantage seems to be that if you use an authorized repair center, Apple has the resources to pay compensation when something goes south. Good luck getting anything but an apology when your corner repair center posts your sex video online, or the high school kids working there spreads it around their school. Thinking that a local repair facility is less likely to post your naked pictures, or more likely to have ability to compensate, is delusional. The lesson is everything on your phone is public.
    • This. Everything on my phone is public or at the very least possible-public. Not that it excuses the behavior here. 5 killion sounds about right for a settlement. The cost to the companies gotta HURT or it wont have the needed effect.
    • Good luck getting anything but an apology when your corner repair center posts your sex video online, or the high school kids working there spreads it around their school. Thinking that a local repair facility is less likely to post your naked pictures, or more likely to have ability to compensate, is delusional.

      You can also demolish the corner repair center with a baseball bat or break the little twerp's knees more easily and far more succinctly.
      You can't really do that to a corporation. Unless we all do it together.

      Apple IS kinda really asking for it, building their house out of glass and all... Not only is it all susceptible to baseball bats - there's nowhere to hide. They don't even have fuckin corners anymore.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      You should expect jail time for that kind of thing. At least in the UK businesses usually have insurance to cover this kind of compensation so chances are you should get your pay-out too.

      • Some things are priceless, like your privacy. A payout might not undo that damage.
        • by teg ( 97890 )

          Some things are priceless, like your privacy. A payout might not undo that damage.

          If I got a couple of million dollars, I might be able to live just fine with some pictures of me and a girlfriend being leaked... and I'm already doing better than average economically.

          • by e3m4n ( 947977 )
            that is something that varies by individual, and its not something you can decide ahead of time. This is a choice being made for you. What if you were a teacher? Or a member of the PTA, or school site-based-counsel, or even a member of the school board of city counsel? This is the sort of thing that could damage your career. As a teacher, especially female, it doesnt matter if you had the pics on a jump drive locked away in your safe, and some burglar broke into your safe and posted them on the internet. It
  • want posted to 4chan.

    If you have compromising content you don't want shared either fix it yourself, destroy your toy, or have the sense to put it on microSD card for easy removal (not an option on functionally crippled phones but you knew what you signed up for).

    Non-techies won't think that way but their antics and noodz will amuse us.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday June 13, 2021 @02:03PM (#61483328)

    We need the right to repair. We need the right to repair. We need the right to repair. Say it again? We need the right to repair.

    • And she really would have repaired it herself? Most people have neither the skills nor inclination especially for devices that are regularly replaced for fashion purposes.
      • She could've had someone she knows and trusts repair it for her, instead of handing it over to some faceless multi-national corporation, who pawned it off to another faceless multi-national subcontractor. (Pegatron is the former ODM branch of Asus [wikipedia.org], and is responsible for making about 8% of all laptops in the world by the latest figures. In case you didn't know, an ODM is like an OEM except they also design the product. Name brands like Apple, Dell, Lenovo, etc. don't actually make laptops. They hire an ODM
        • by teg ( 97890 )

          She could've had someone she knows and trusts repair it for her, instead of handing it over to some faceless multi-national corporation, who pawned it off to another faceless multi-national subcontractor. (Pegatron is the former ODM branch of Asus [wikipedia.org], and is responsible for making about 8% of all laptops in the world by the latest figures. In case you didn't know, an ODM is like an OEM except they also design the product. Name brands like Apple, Dell, Lenovo, etc. don't actually make laptops. They hire an ODM to make it for them, to be sold under the name brand's label.) On the repair side too, a small repair shop lives and dies by its reputation. Word gets out that one of its employees did something like this, and it goes out of business. A bigger company cares less. They just fire the guy and distribute a press release saying that the offending party has been terminated, and that they uphold the highest standards of behavior. That's part of what you give up when you eschew the local mom and pop shop, in order to get a slightly lower price at a big box retailer.

          You think most people knows and trust a repair shop? Very unlikely... and if she did, that's probably the last place she'd want to hand in a phone with sexy pictures. I'd care less if some faceless stranger saw pictures of me than if people I knew did.

        • I agree with you on the right to repair, but you are wrong on this one. Faceless multi-national subcontract have more to lose than a random shop. They represent Apple, and if they screw someone over that someone can successfully sue for compensation as happened in this case. A random shop? You can sue them, they would at worst declare bankruptcy, and you would certainly not get a multi-million dollar settlement out of it.
    • I agree, but that wouldn't necessarily have changed anything here. Instead of some contractor, she may have ended up taking the phone directly to someone that swiped her photos. There's a chain of trust that needs to be established, and you never know who the bad actor is going to be. Maybe with a small shop they can't afford to do something stupid like this, but when you look at all the crimes committed in broad daylight by people that have a weird notion that they won't get caught, I bet you'd hear about

  • Assume that everything you do with a phone can and will be observed by others.

  • Apple keeps a firm grip on the repair of its devices

    What are they doing with their other hand?

  • $150 is nothing if one breaks to replace it especially if I photos of doing things to my orifices and shafts at hooker and blow parties..

  • by elcor ( 4519045 ) on Sunday June 13, 2021 @02:35PM (#61483436)
    in settlement use Apple repair.
  • From the story:

    Two iPhone repair technicians in Sacramento, uploaded “10 photos of her in various stages of undress and a sex video” to her Facebook account.

    So they also stole credentials and logged in to her Facebook account?! What criminal penalties did these (if properly charged) felons actually face?

    • by larwe ( 858929 )

      So they also stole credentials and logged in to her Facebook account?!

      The way I read the story, they used her device to do the posting, and her device was already logged in.

      • Which is so silly since she is going to just delete them and you are going to jail. It's amazing anybody would do something so dumb?
        • by larwe ( 858929 )
          Sadly by the time she found out, likely they were downloaded/screenshotted by her "friends". However, 100% yes on "moron go to jail, go directly to jail, do not collect $200"
  • worthless without pics.

  • by ytene ( 4376651 ) on Sunday June 13, 2021 @06:19PM (#61483996)
    Isn’t there a separate concern here: that despite all their claims, Apple’s iDevice technology is not as secure as they would have you believe.

    Specifically, why haven’t Apple designed iOS so that a technician can access the device with enough privilege to ensure that it is functioning correctly, whilst the legitimate owner’s personal information is locked away [encrypted] with a key held in the device’s Secure Enclave. That way, even if the technician tried to access the owner’s photo library, they would not be able to.

    Obviously, this entire line of thought becomes a moot point if the owner of the handset gives up their PIN number if asked. But this smacks of being a fundamental problem with Apple’s much-vaunted security. A bit like the lies they offer around security of data in the Cloud - for example I tried and failed to help a friend who was unable to get bookmarks to sync between her iPad and her iPhone and was present when she called Apple Support only to hear the Apple Tech she was speaking with recite some of the bookmarks present on her device. Like: how?

    They talk a good talk, but I’m not sure their much-vaunted support for privacy is worth all that much.
  • Did this iPhone have no security not to let this happen?

  • by xenobyte ( 446878 ) on Monday June 14, 2021 @04:46AM (#61485102)

    If people just stopped CREATING those photos and videos, there would be nothing to steal/leak.

  • Those who take naked photos are doomed to repeat history.

  • by kaatochacha ( 651922 ) on Monday June 14, 2021 @11:30AM (#61486108)

    It's the equivalent of "Hi! My photo album, full of nude picture of myself and sex photos, has a broken hinge. Can you, random repair person at a large company, repair it from me? I secretly hope you don't look at anything inside it."

    These aren't 70 year old seniors making this mistake, these are people who grew up with the technology. It's as if we're all collectively getting more gullible and dumber.

Our business in life is not to succeed but to continue to fail in high spirits. -- Robert Louis Stevenson

Working...