By now you know that the FBI is demanding and a federal magistrate judge is orderingĀ Apple to build a backdoor to its operating system.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation says they need it for only one phone, only this one time. But nobody is buying that, including the man who says if that is true, he can do it.
This is a Reality Check you wonāt see anywhere else.
The case involves an iPhone belonging to one of the San Bernardino shooters, Syed Farook. Farookās iPhone, which was given to him by his government employer, is locked and the FBI says they canāt get into it unless they get help from Apple.
So what exactly is the FBI asking for?
To be clear, Apple cannot extract information directly from Farookāsāor anyone elseāsāiPhone. That is because all data on an iPhone is encrypted.
The security measures for iOS 8, which rolled out in 2014, ensure that no one, not even Apple, can access information on an iPhone by sneaking through a software ābackdoor.ā
Now a federal judge says Apple has to create that backdoor. Apple says they fight this all the way to the Supreme Court.
John McAfee is the creator of McAfee security software and is one of the foremost cyber security experts in the world. I spoke to him by Skype, and he says this fight is really over encryption as a whole.
āThe problem is that once you put a backdoor into a piece of software, every hacker in the world is going to find it and use it, and [then] weāre in a world of hurt,ā he says.
McAfee says that if the FBI is telling the truth about their intentions and they really need to get into just this one, then he and his team of hackers have agreed to hack that San Bernardino shooterās phone for the FBI for free. And he says they can do it in less than three weeks.
āBut what I have done is said, look, you know, if in fact you are sincere in wanting to get access to just that one phone, my team and I will do it,ā he says. āWe can crack itāeasily. I guarantee it. There is no un-crackable encryption. We all know that.
āThey have not responded [to my offer] and I do not think they will because itās not just that one phone they want. They want a key to everyoneās phone.ā
McAfee does say there is a bigger issue at hand, because what the FBI and the federal government is actually doing here is a move that will destroy encryption. In an op-ed he writes, āAfter years of arguments by virtually every industry specialist that back doors will be a bigger boon to hackers and to our nationās enemies than publishing our nuclear codes.ā
āWe all say the same thing,ā McAfee says. āYou canāt do it and keep us safe as a nation. . . . And you canāt do it and keep us safe as individuals. āCause I guarantee that once that backdoor goes in, all of our bank accounts are going to be emptied by the the bad hackers. All of our social security numbers are going to be known.ā
What you need to know is that if McAfee is right, the FBI can demonstrate their true intentions easily. Let the nationās best hackers open that one phone. But if this move is as many people believeāactually a move to force Apple to end encryptionāthen the ramifications are much bigger than government and terrorists.
Breaking encryption will impact every Americanās privacy, banking, finances and online identity. Encryption isnāt the tool that bad guys use to hide. It is the only thing that actually can make you safe online.
Article reposted with permission from Truth in Media.
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