iPhone SE Retail Box Allegedly Leaked, Tips 16GB Storage and ‘SE’ Branding


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As Apple’s Spring event scheduled for Monday closes in, more leaks with details about the unannounced 4-inch iPhone – aka iPhone SE – have emerged. While we have already seen the alleged smartphone from all angles in a recent video, a new leaked image claiming to show the retail box of the smartphone has surfaced online, seemingly confirming the name and some of its features.

The alleged retail box first of all clearly mentions ‘iPhone SE’ confirming the official name of the device, which few weeks back was rumoured to come with the iPhone 5se moniker. The box also shows ’16GB’ indicating the Cupertino-based firm to stick with this as the base variant for the new model. This is still better than the iPhone 5c model, the base variant of which came with 8GB inbuilt storage at launch.

http://gadgets.ndtv.com/mobiles/news/iphone-se-retail-box-allegedly-leaked-tips-16gb-storage-and-se-branding-815207

Tags: Android, Apple Mobile, Apple Smartphone, iPhone, iPhone 5SE, iPhone SE, Mobiles, Smartphones

 

Apple-FBI fight may be the first salvo in a bigger war


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The Apple-FBI fight may just be the opening salvo in a broader war over encryption, as technology companies continue to lock up their users’ messages, photos and other data to shield them from thieves and spies — and, incidentally, criminal investigators.

WhatsApp, the globally popular messaging system owned by Facebook, has already run into trouble on this front in Brazil. WhatsApp encrypts all user messages in “end to end” fashion, meaning that no one but the sender and recipient can read them. Brazilian authorities arrested a Facebook executive recently after the company said it couldn’t unscramble encrypted messages sought by police.

US officials are debating how to enforce a similar wiretap order for WhatsApp communications in a US criminal case, the New York Times reported . WhatsApp started as a way to exchange written messages over the Internet, but it has added services like photo-sharing and voice calling, while gradually building encryption into all those formats.

Spokesmen for WhatsApp and the US Justice Department declined comment on the Times report, which said the wiretap order had been sealed to keep details secret.

http://www.arabnews.com/economy/news/897176

Former Homeland Security Chief Talks Apple, FBI, And Encryption


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Earlier this month, a group of former top government officials came out to say they sided with Apple in its refusal to help the FBI crack into an iPhone used by one of the San Bernardino shooters.

Former Department of Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff was among those siding with the world’s most profitable company. He argued that developing software to weaken the iPhone’s existing protections would be like “creating a bacterial biological weapon” that could also be used by criminals.

http://fortune.com/tag/michael-chertoff/

An iPhone-hacking tool likely wouldn’t stay secret for long


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Suppose Apple loses its court fight with the FBI and has to produce a software tool that would help agents hack into an iPhone — specifically, a device used by one of the San Bernardino mass shooters. Could that tool really remain secret and locked away from potential misuse?

Not very likely, according to security and legal experts, who say a “potentially unlimited” number of people could end up getting a close at the tool’s inner workings. Apple’s tool would have to run a gauntlet of tests and challenges before any information it helps produce can be used in court, exposing the company’s work to additional scrutiny by forensics experts and defense lawyers — and increasing the likelihood of leaks with every step.

True, the Justice Department says it only wants a tool that would only work on the San Bernardino phone and that would be useless to anyone who steals it without Apple’s closely guarded digital signature.

But widespread disclosure of the software’s underlying code could allow government agents, private companies and hackers across the world to dissect Apple’s methods and incorporate them into their own device-cracking software. That work might also point to previously unknown vulnerabilities in iPhone software that hackers and spies could exploit.

http://www.seattlepi.com/business/technology/article/An-iPhone-hacking-tool-likely-wouldn-t-stay-6922241.php

US prosecutors, Apple to bring witnesses to hearing on locked iPhone


The U.S. government and Apple Inc will be able to cross-examine the other’s witnesses in a court hearing next week over whether the technology company must help federal investigators unlock an encrypted iPhone tied to one of the San Bernardino killers, Apple said.

The hearing, set for Tuesday, is the latest development in a showdown between Apple and the U.S. government that has become a lightning rod in the national debate over digital privacy and what kind of data on phones and personal devices should be accessible by law enforcement.

All the witnesses have given written declarations in the legal briefs already filed in the case, said an Apple lawyer on Friday, who spoke to reporters on a conference call on condition of anonymity.

http://www.channelnewsasia.com/news/technology/us-prosecutors-apple-to/2616882.html

Obama, at South by Southwest, Calls for Law Enforcement Access in Encryption Fight


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President Obama said Friday that law enforcement must be legally able to collect information from smartphones and other electronic devices, making clear, despite disagreement within his administration, that he opposes the stance on encryption taken by technology companies like Apple.

Speaking to an audience of about 2,100 technology executives and enthusiasts at the South by Southwest festival here, Mr. Obama delivered his most extensive comments on an issue that has split the technology community and pitted law enforcement against other national security agencies. Mr. Obama declined to comment specifically on the efforts by the F.B.I. to require Apple’s help in gaining data from an iPhone used by one of the terrorists in the December attack in San Bernardino, Calif.

But the president warned that America had already accepted that law enforcement can “rifle through your underwear” in searches for those suspected of preying on children, and he said there was no reason that a person’s digital information should be treated differently.

“If, technologically, it is possible to make an impenetrable device or system, where the encryption is so strong that there is no key, there is no door at all, then how do we apprehend the child pornographer?” Mr. Obama said. “How do we disrupt a terrorist plot?”

If the government has no way into a smartphone, he added, “then everyone is walking around with a Swiss bank account in your pocket.”

Mr. Obama’s decision to embrace the law enforcement position on encryption represents a fundamental break with a tech community that has strongly supported his political career. For years, the president nurtured close ties to Silicon Valley, tapping the youthful talent there to help him reshape the federal government’s aging technology infrastructure and seeking out leading executives for private advice and millions in campaign cash

http://www.nytimes.com/2016/03/12/us/politics/obama-heads-to-south-by-southwest-festival-to-talk-about-technology.html?_r=0?login=google

France Clears Bill That Could Force Apple to Unlock Terror Data


French lawmakers backed a plan to impose penalties including jail time on technology executives who deny access to encrypted data during a terrorist investigation, giving security services and prosecutors the power to force companies such as Apple Inc. to cooperate.

An amendment providing the new power was submitted by the opposition party The Republicans and, while the government hasn’t officially supported the measure, it was included in Justice Minister Jean-Jacques Urvoas’s bill to overhaul legal procedures and fight organized crime in the wake of the Nov. 13 terrorist attacks that killed 130 people in Paris.

The lower of chamber of parliament cleared the bill on first reading by 474 votes to 32.

“The rule aims to force phone makers to give investigators data and it will be up to the manufacturer to use whatever technique is necessary,” Republican lawmaker Philippe Goujon, who proposed the amendment, said in an interview. “The target is to have them cooperate. The aim is not to break the encryption — the principle is that manufacturers should cooperate.”

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2016-03-08/france-votes-on-bill-that-could-make-apple-unlock-terrorist-data

Apple – FBI ‘Conundrum’ Could Set Off Chain Reaction Worldwide


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As the battle between Silicon Valley and Washington DC wages on over a warrant to unlock the San Bernardino shooter’s iPhone, the US government has accused Apple of declaring itself “the primary guardians of American’s privacy,” said Justice Department lawyers.

However, “allowing law enforcement to breach such encryption […] unravels a technological bulwark protecting privacy and cybersecurity, leaving criminals, terrorists, and spies to exploit our growing cyber vulnerabilities,” said Professor Fidler, who predicts governments around the world will be watching the Apple versus FBI case intently.

http://sputniknews.com/us/20160311/1036129049/apple-fbi-iphone-battle.html

 

APPLE – FBI ‘CONUNDRUM’ COULD SET OFF CHAIN REACTION WORLDWIDE


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We are in a conundrum because, if either side of this argument prevails, the bad guys gain advantages we do not appear to know how to mitigate,” David Fidler, cybersecurity expert and Professor of law at Indiana University told Sputnik.

As the battle between Silicon Valley and Washington DC wages on over a warrant to unlock the San Bernardino shooter’s iPhone, the US government has accused Apple of declaring itself “the primary guardians of American’s privacy,” said Justice Department lawyers.

 

U.S. Supreme Court turns away Apple’s e-books antitrust appeal


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Ending Apple’s legal feud with state and federal antitrust regulators, the U.S. Supreme Court on Monday rejected the Silicon Valley power’s last-ditch appeal of an order requiring the company to establish a $450 million compensation fund because it colluded with publishers in the electronic book market to jack up prices.

In a one-line order, the justices without comment let stand a federal appeals court ruling last year that backed a lower court decision against Apple, accused by the U.S. Justice Department and dozens of states of violating antitrust laws when the company entered the e-books market in 2010. The gist of the government’s case was that Apple tried to rig the e-books market in an effort to cut into Amazon’s grip on the industry.

http://www.mercurynews.com/crime-courts/ci_29605761/u-s-supreme-court-turns-away-apples-antitrust