mike eggleston
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The FBI's iPhone encryption backdoor demand is unsafe and now unwarranted
It is under the Frequently Asked Questions under "How does iCloud Keychain protect my information?". There is also another question on there that asks "Can I make sure my information isn't backed up in iCloud?" if you are wanting to know about that as well.iCloud protects your information with end-to-end encryption, which provides the highest level of data security. Your data is protected with a key that's made from information unique to your device, and combined with your device passcode, which only you know. No one else can access or read this data, either in transit or storage.
Either way, even with having the iCloud data, the FBI nor anyone else would be able to easily decrypt your passcodes. -
'Apple Glass' details leaked, will cost $499 and work with prescriptions
hentaiboy said:Can’t respect leaks from someone that sounds like Fozzie Bear 🐻 -
iOS 14 leaks are proof why there should never be an encryption backdoor
DAalseth said:Any back door for law enforcement, would be stolen, distributed, and exploited within weeks of it’s being introduced.Honestly, I think that you are giving a lot more credit there. I don't think it would take weeks or even days: I am thinking hours. I have literally seen a computer melt because of "Code Red" and "Nimda" viruses that were able to exploit backdoors (admittedly those are Windows backdoors, but the analogy works). Smart phones are many factors more powerful than the computers were back in the early 00's, so that kind of open door would definitely be exploited much quicker.Edit: grammer
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iOS 14, macOS 10.16 may have big upgrades to Messages
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Nintendo's Mario Kart Tour goes live on iOS after multiple delays