An excerpt from the blogmaverick.com link:

“Speech can only be free when it is protected. We are only free when we can say 
what we feel we must in any manner of private or public that we choose.  We 
have a right to protect our speech from those, domestic or otherwise,  who may 
watch or monitor us.  Which is why encryption is vitally important to all of 
us.”

That makes me think back to being up a telephone pole and listening to a vacuum 
cleaner salesman give the woman of the house a high pressure sales pitch.  Our 
policy was that we were to do everything possible to avoid disconnecting a call 
in progress.  So I listened to lots of calls, waiting for them to end to do my 
work.  That one day, I thought I was doing the woman a favor.  I disconnected 
her to move some copper pair assignments.  She immediately came out on her 
porch decided the guy up the pole by her house was the reason the call got 
interrupted and bitched me out for disconnecting a very important phone call.  

I smirk at the notion that the bloggers speech must be protected from those 
that might monitor.  I promise you, he has nothing interesting to say.  And I 
have monitored hundreds if not thousands of conversations.  Boring boring 
boring.   If you don’t want to be monitored, don’t use a phone.  Phone 
companies have always had the legal right to monitor.  How come nobody ever 
screams about that?

From: Forrest Christian (List Account) 
Sent: Friday, February 19, 2016 6:23 PM
To: af 
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] OT Apple

I think the underlying issue here is this:


It used to be that all of this data was kept locked up (or at least behind 
closed doors) in a house, or a place of business, or wherever.   If one wanted 
the data, the government had to go get a search warrant, enter one's house, 
then take the data from you.


Now it's all electronic - in the cloud, on your phone, etc. etc. etc..  With 
the correct tools the government can get that data without jumping through 
those hoops.   Are those the tools we want the government to have?


Just because it's electronic and on your phone or in the cloud should it have 
any less protections than the paper equivalent you used to keep in a file or a 
lockbox?


The issue here isn't about the case at hand - I think we all agree that the law 
enforcement agencies in this case have jumped through all the correct hoops.  
It's more about what capability this creates for the next case where the issue 
isn't as clear cut.  


On Fri, Feb 19, 2016 at 6:11 PM, Chuck McCown <[email protected]> wrote:

  Yeah, happens, but with Target too.  It’s the world we live in.  
  Do you trust Walmart or Amazon?  This is not just a government type of thing. 
 

  Was this malicious, or directed?  
  It was probably an accident.

  And did this harm you?  

  You can have my DNA if  you visit anywhere I am.  It literally leaps off your 
body in the form of skin cells etc.  Sneeze, lick a stamp, take a dump or a 
piss.  The local water and sewer department also have a DNA sample from you.  
Probably get blood type from that too.  

  With a credit card and a few minutes I will have your SSN and all of these 
addresses.  Have done it several times when searching for people.  

  Fingerprints are all over my car and many other places.  

  Why is it such an issue if it is digital data, but the raw data is not 
protected?  

  From: Josh Reynolds 
  Sent: Friday, February 19, 2016 6:05 PM
  To: [email protected] 
  Subject: Re: [AFMUG] OT Apple

  The last time I trusted the federal government with something very important, 
they let my blood type, fingerprint, DNA, social security number, names numbers 
and addresses of relatives and friends, my wife's SSN, and all three of my 
kid's SSNs data get collected by a third party.

  Just an example.

  On Feb 19, 2016 7:01 PM, "Chuck McCown" <[email protected]> wrote:

    If I have a business in Tooele, Utah, I have to have “Knox Box” on the 
building with a key in it for the building.  The fire department has a key for 
all the knox boxes.  Is that much more invasive than unlocking your phone?  
Nobody is screaming about that.  Happens in many cities.  

    If you have windows in your house, anyone  can punch one out and get into 
your  house.  But  you all  have windows.  

    Cops can pull you over with probable cause now.  

    Are you suggesting that if the code gets released in the wild cops  are 
going to engage in an illegal search using this tool?  If they are going to 
mess with you they will simply plant something on you.  

    If this code gets into the wild and is abused in this nature, abut 50 
milliseconds later there will be a new version of iOS that will not work with 
it.  

    So, firemen can be trusted, right?  More than the NSA?  Drunken fireman 
buddy with a cop that wants to use the knox box key can be trusted?  

    The IRS can put all my banking and financial in the cloud now as can my 
bank.  A disgruntled employee is all it would take.  The bank and the IRS are 
more trustworthy than the NSA?

    I don’t have any family pictures that I would be worried if they got 
published.   I am just not catching this paranoid cynicism that seems to be 
attached to this issue.  

    From: Travis Johnson 
    Sent: Friday, February 19, 2016 5:36 PM
    To: [email protected] 
    Subject: Re: [AFMUG] OT Apple

    What if this path continues, and in the future the police officer that just 
pulled you over for speeding, suspects you might be up to something else... so 
he then takes your phone, unlocks it from his car, downloads everything to his 
laptop, and then sends it off to be inspected? Do you want all your private 
information (banking, financial, family pictures, etc.) now "in the cloud" for 
anyone with access to see?

    Travis


    On 2/19/2016 5:23 PM, [email protected] wrote:

      What is wrong with the FBI having this ability?� How does that have a 
negative impact on me?
      I could argue that it has a positive benefit to the nation.� 
      �
      From: Travis Johnson 
      Sent: Friday, February 19, 2016 5:15 PM
      To: [email protected] 
      Subject: Re: [AFMUG] OT Apple
      �
      I don't think that's the case.... do you really see the FBI turning the 
phone over to Apple? What happens if Apple comes back a week later and says 
"oops, sorry... we nuked it". The FBI wants Apple to write a new IOS version 
that will not erase the phone after 10 attempts at the login code. Then the FBI 
would load that onto the phone, and attempt to brute force the phone combo.

      At that point, the FBI could do that to any phone in the future as well.

      Apple is doing the right thing here.

      Travis



      On 2/19/2016 4:05 PM, George Skorup wrote:

        As I understand it, that is exactly what the gov is asking them for. 
FBI wants Apple to decrypt and send over the data. Nothing more. No "software 
on every phone" to do this. Just that ONE phone. Get the data, then incinerate 
the device.


        On 2/19/2016 4:59 PM, Nate Burke wrote:

          But they're not actually asking for a back door, are they?� They're 
just saying 'hey, we have this physical device, can we give it to you, and you 
get us the data off of it'?� I've got to think that the Engineers at apple 
have a way to do this thought up.� 

          Although at the same time, If they're trying to unlock the phone, 
couldn't the Gov't with it's vast resources, just simply make a bit by bit copy 
of the flash chip in the phone and just go through and try every unlock code?


          On 2/19/2016 4:54 PM, Josh Reynolds wrote:

            Yup. Google agrees as well.

            On Feb 19, 2016 4:52 PM, "Sam Lambie" <[email protected]> wrote:

              Screw the govt. Apple is doing entirely doing the right thing. 

              �
              On Fri, Feb 19, 2016 at 3:47 PM, Nate Burke <[email protected]> 
wrote:

                My Boss and I just had a discussion about this, he think that 
Cook should be in Jail for failing to comply with the order.� 

                �
                On 2/19/2016 4:46 PM, Josh Reynolds wrote:

                  ... What?

                  Seriously?

                  On Feb 19, 2016 4:44 PM, <[email protected]> wrote:

                    Treason?





              -- 

              -- 
              Sam Lambie
              Taosnet Wireless Tech.
              575-758-7598 Office
              www.Taosnet.com











-- 

      Forrest Christian CEO, PacketFlux Technologies, Inc.

      Tel: 406-449-3345 | Address: 3577 Countryside Road, Helena, MT 59602
      [email protected] | http://www.packetflux.com

         


Reply via email to