Internet Insider: Your cellphone, your privacy, and dangerous backdoors...

INTERNET INSIDER
February 26, 2016
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This week saw big news on the privacy front, as tech company Apple took a strong stand against an FBI demand that it help them hack into a locked and encrypted iPhone, by creating a new piece of firmware that would undermine the privacy of iPhones everywhere.

In a message to all Apple customers, CEO Tim Cook wrote that the FBI demand “threatens the security of our customers.” Cook also emphasized that encryption is “the only way to keep [customers’] information safe”. Apple’s stand has won support from online privacy advocates, including from our friends and allies at Fight for the Future who organized rallies across the U.S. to protest the FBI’s invasive tactics. This looks like a fast-moving story, so don’t forget to follow our Facebook and Twitter feeds for the latest.

Access

February 25: ‘Wireless propaganda’ and the lame denials it inspires

February 24: Ottawa vote reminds us Big Telecom’s cartel is long past its expiration date

February 22: Facebook and Google stake claims in developing world with global internet projects

Free Expression

February 25: Disney CEO asks employees to chip in to pay copyright lobbyists

February 22: MSNBC cuts away from Bernie Sanders as he condemns the Trans-Pacific Partnership

February 19: German court rejects suit by publishers against Google

Privacy

February 23: Why Canada isn’t having a policy debate over encryption

February 23: 'Difficult to determine' scope of privacy breach in Five Eyes data sharing, says watchdog

February 23: Book review: Gabriella Coleman’s Hacker, Hoaxer, Whistleblower, Spy

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