>we respect customers freedom
>refuses to unlock iphone when terrorism is involved, potentially endangering thousands of lives
>cooperates with investigators when they can see an opportunity for itunes to make more money, ironically by using itunes account information
THINK DIFFERENT
>>55682507
Apple always complies with legally given warrants.
In his case, they had a warrant asking for information about IPs that had logged into a specific iCloud email. Apple had this information and provided it.
In the case of the san bernardino shooter, they actually gave the feds the entire contents of his iCloud account that was not zero knowledge encrypted. Where they drew the line is the phone itself, which they didn't have the passcode of and couldn't unlock (unless they were to build a backdoored version of the iPhone operating system, which would be horrible precedent).
>>55682658
They already had a backdoor on the iPhone.
>>55682706
Pretty much everything has a backdoor
>>55682714
Can you tell us where that backdoor on Android is?
Here's the source code: https://source.android.com/source/downloading.html
>>55682783
>no backdoor
>front door is the whole front of the house missing
>>55682507
wow, with the free Win10 upgrade fast approaching, and the adoption numbers way below Microsoft targets, the shills are increasing their throwing of shade onto the competitors.
>>55683464
I use GNU/Linux though
>>55682507
>he fell for the we won't unlock the phone meme