NYTimes: Why Apple’s Stand Against the F.B.I. Hurts Its Own Customers

NYTimes: Why Apple’s Stand Against the F.B.I. Hurts Its Own Customers by Jamil N. Jaffer and Daniel J. Rosenthal:

Two weeks ago, privacy advocates across the country celebrated as the Federal Bureau of Investigation backed off its request for Apple to help gain access into the iPhone of Syed Farook, one of the terrorists who killed 14 people in San Bernardino, Calif., in December.

On Friday, the F.B.I. again sought Apple’s assistance — this time to help crack an iPhone belonging to a convicted drug dealer — by requesting that a federal judge overturn an earlier decision in Brooklyn supporting Apple.

Apple had argued in part that it didn’t want iPhone hacking by the government to become routine. That the F.B.I. so soon wants access to another iPhone would seem to prove Apple right and to vindicate the company’s principled resistance, right? Wrong.

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