The FBI also called for Apple's access to two iPhone's top suspects in the shooting. The agency believes that Mohammed Saeed Alshamrani, a member of the Saudi military, is facing a charge that caused the three Pensacola air strikes on December 6. believed that Alshamrani had two iPhone It's protected by a lock code. The FBI sent a letter to a tech company last Monday asking for help to open both centers, according to NBC News.
Both rooms are protected and password protected
In a letter sent to Apple's already two-year-old counsel, Katherine Adams, the forensic evidence showed they had permission from the judge access devices. However, both are password protected. Researchers have tried to guess it using the most common, but unsuccessful.
There is an additional addition to one of them. Alshamrani died in the attack by firing a guard, but not before firing a shot at one of the extremities. Which makes it difficult to make efforts to find content. The FBI wants to reach both of them even though the prostitute has died, as a precautionary measure, according to the book. In response, Apple said:
We have great respect for the security forces and have always worked closely together to assist with their investigations. When the FBI asked us for details regarding the case last month, we gave them all the information we have and will continue to support them with the information we have received.
This case contains details of the past. In 2016, two terrorists killed 14 people in a Californian city in San Bernardino. In that case, one of the authors' iPhone 5c had encryption and deleted protection in case of incorrect password entry. The FBI has asked the company to develop software that lets you log in, when Apple declined to say that it would fit the primary key.
In response to Apple's privacy manager
When Apple officially appeared years ago at a CES event in Las Vegas, CNBC was able to see Jane Horvath in a privacy conference. Horvath is a senior director of privacy Apple is global, so it took the opportunity to prevent encryption this way:
Dynamite panel @ces # CES2020 discussing privacy issues and consumer expectations. Erin Egan Facebook, Jane Horvath Apple, Susan Shook P&G and FTC's Rebacca Slaughter pic.twitter.com/tI5fXqCPJT
– Steve Embry (@stephenembryjd) January 7, 2020
Our calls are small and they can be lost or stolen. If we're going to rely on (saving) our health or financial data, we'll have to make sure that if you lose your device, you won't lose sensitive data.
In connection with the shooting of Pensacola last month, the official reaffirmed the line that protected his company:
Creating a backdoor to encryption is not the way we will solve those problems.
That back is a reference to software development that goes beyond Apple's security measures designed to protect its devices. The software Tim Cook personally described as "cancer-like", as it would put all other company devices at risk.
Apple's official appearance at the Las Vegas fair comes a year after a successful campaign to protect privacy. Campaign resumed a well-known phrase for the city of sin, which means "what happens to your iPhone, stays on your iphone". Of course, Apple's position on the issue hasn't changed over the years: it has helped the security forces and bodies without going over the marked mark.