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Google, Microsoft, Facebook, Twitter To Back Apple With Legal Filing In FBI Case (recode.net)

An anonymous reader writes: Google plans to follow Microsoft in throwing its legal support behind Apple in its increasingly contentious dispute with the federal government around the iPhone connected with the San Bernardino terror attacks, according to sources.

At a congressional hearing on Thursday, Microsoft's legal chief, Brad Smith, said that the company plans to file an amicus brief next week in support of Apple's resistance to helping the FBI hack the phone. Google will deliver its own supporting brief 'soon,' according to sources familiar with the company.

2 of 129 comments (clear)

  1. Re: Heh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    You should probably look up Bill Gates' follow up to that article you linked, in which he says that Financial Times mis-quoted and misled readers by taking his statements out of context.

  2. Re:You can not find the truth in a legal document by adamstew · · Score: 5, Informative

    Have you read what the court order to apple says? Actually says? I have read the actual court order.

    It says:

    1) It will bypass or disable the auto-erase function.
    2) it will enable the FBI to submit passcodes to the subject device for testing electronically via the physical device port, bluetooth, wifi, or other protocol available.
    3) it will not purposefully introduce any additional delay between passcodes attempts beyond what is incurred by hardware
    4) they are to provide a signed iPhone software file that can be loaded onto the device and run from RAM without modifying the iOS installation on the actual phone, the user data, or system partitions on the device's flash memory

    Source: http://www.ndaa.org/pdf/SB-Sho...

    So yes...they are required to allow for electronic entry of the passcode. And they have to write the software in a way that hasn't been done before... without touching the flash memory on the iPhone. You can not run iOS on the phone "from RAM".

    This is absolutely a new piece of software that they will likely have to start with. Much more complicated than just "removing a few lines of code".