mcarling
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Indian government approves Apple bid to open stores free of 30% sourcing policy
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Apple 'seems willing' to help repair, access iPhone of teen lost at sea
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FBI paid over $1.34M for hack into San Bernardino iPhone, agency's director says
This is an example of the FBI's typical sloppy thinking. Not finding anything on Farook's iPhone [b]does not[/b] support the idea that he and his wife did not have outside help. There are two possibilities: either they had outside help or they didn't. Serious investigation would look for evidence that is incompatible with and could refute one of those possibilities. Not finding information on the iPhone is compatible with both possibilities, does not refute any hypothesis, and so does not support the idea that he and his wife did not have outside help. The mistake of thinking that it does is called the inductive fallacy.
Since Comey is not smart enough to understand the inductive fallacy, his services are not worth $183,000 per year. -
Apple turning comparatively low profit on iPhone SE despite cheaper parts, analyst says
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iPhone SE generating low traffic at Apple Stores, in line with predictions, analyst says