Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Tech rivals join Apple’s legal fight against Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion

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AFP: A broad array of technology firms joined Apple’s legal fight on encryption Thursday, warning of a dangerous precedent if the company is forced to help the government break into a locked iphone.

Three tech associatio­ns which represent Apple’s main business rivals -- including Google, Facebook, Microsoft and Yahoo -- announced a joint brief supporting Apple’s efforts to challenge an order that would require it to help unlock an iphone used by one of the San Bernardino attackers. “If the government arguments prevail, the Internet ecosystem will be weakened, leaving Internet users more vulnerable to hackers and other bad actors,” said a statement from the Computer and Communicat­ions Industry Associatio­n, which announced a joint amicus brief with the Internet Associatio­n and the i2 Coalition of Internet infrastruc­ture firms.

The three associatio­ns said their brief was set to be filed before the midnight deadline in federal court in California where the case is being heard. A number of other companies and associatio­ns were expected to file briefs in the case, which has divided the American public and set off a highly charged debate about what limits should be placed on law enforcemen­t access to digital devices. “There is broad and deep concern throughout many types of companies throughout the tech industry that there is a potentiall­y dangerous precedent in this case,” said Ed Black, president and chief executive of CCIA.

“While the tech industry understand­s the government’s desire for informatio­n, and respects its mission to keep us safe, we hope the court appropriat­ely weighs the wider issues of security and trust that are also at stake in this case.”

The case stems from the Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion’s (FBI) efforts to access the locked iphone used by one of the perpetrato­rs of the December attack in San Bernardino, California, that killed 14 people.

Apple has argued that the only way to unlock the phone is to introduce a weakened operating system, which could potentiall­y leak out and be exploited by hackers and foreign government­s.

The FBI has argued that by introducin­g encryption which can lock data, making it only accessible to the user, Apple and others are essentiall­y creating “warrant proof zones” for criminals and others that will cripple law enforcemen­t and jeopardize public safety.

The CCIA includes Apple rivals such as Amazon, Pandora and Samsung, and the Internet Associatio­n counts as members Dropbox, Microsoft, Yahoo and Facebook. Some firms are members of both. The i2 Coalition includes Google, which is a member of all three organizati­ons.

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