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Apple CEO Tim Cook to speak at White House cybersecurity summit

“Apple CEO Tim Cook will speak at the White House cybersecurity summit Friday at Stanford University,” Cory Bennett reports for The Hill. “The White House is expected to reveal its next executive action on cybersecurity at the summit, which will bring together tech executives, leading academics and government officials to discuss ways in which the government can better collaborate with the private sector on cybersecurity initiatives.”

“Cook’s remarks will come amid a debate between tech companies and law enforcement officials over encryption,” Bennett reports. “Apple has feuded directly with Department of Justice officials in recent months over the tech giant’s encryption measures. The company claims its newest operating system locks everyone out from accessing data stored on its devices, including law enforcement officials and Apple itself.”

“Bureau Director James Comey has been outspoken in his opposition to what he calls ‘the going dark problem.’ He’s called on Congress to pass laws mandating that companies give government access to data on their devices, often referred to as a ‘backdoor,'” Bennett reports. “President Obama recently expressed some support for this concept, commenting during a January press conference that law enforcement should have a way to monitor communications over social media and on the Internet.”

Read more in the full article here.

MacDailyNews Take: Do not support fear-mongers who espouse Big Brother-esque surveillance doctrine.

Adhere to the U.S. Constitution.

Those who would give up essential liberty to purchase a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety. – Benjamin Franklin, Historical Review of Pennsylvania, 1759

Freedom is never more than one generation away from extinction. We didn’t pass it to our children in the bloodstream. It must be fought for, protected, and handed on for them to do the same, or one day we will spend our sunset years telling our children and our children’s children what it was once like in the United States where men were free. – Ronald Reagan, March 30, 1961

Visit the Apple-backed reformgovernmentsurveillance.com today.

Related articles:
UK prime minister Cameron demands backdoors into messaging apps or he’ll ban them – January 13, 2015
Apple’s iPhone encryption is a godsend, even if government snoops and cops hate it – October 8, 2014
Short-timer U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder blasts Apple for protecting users’ privacy against government overreach – September 30, 2014
What if Osama bin Laden had an iPhone? – September 26, 2014
FBI blasts Apple for protective users’ privacy by locking government, police out of iPhones and iPads – September 25, 2014
Apple thinks different about privacy – September 23, 2014
Apple’s iOS Activation Lock reduces iPhone thefts, Samsung phone thefts skyrocket – September 18, 2014
Apple CEO Tim Cook ups privacy to new level, takes direct swipe at Google – September 18, 2014
Apple will no longer unlock most iPhones, iPads for government, police – even with search warrants – September 18, 2014
Would you trade privacy for national security? Most Americans wouldn’t – August 6, 2014
Apple begins encrypting iCloud email sent between providers – July 15, 2014
Obama administration demands master encryption keys from firms in order to conduct electronic surveillance against Internet users – July 24, 2013
U.S. NSA seeks to build quantum computer to crack most types of encryption – January 3, 2014
Apple’s iMessage encryption trips up U.S. feds’ surveillance – April 4, 2013

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