Bill Gates Says Apple Should Allow FBI to Unlock iPhone

Image Credit: TOBIAS SCHWARZ / Getty Images

Bill Gates has sided with the FBI in their continued battle to convince Apple to provide a security backdoor to the company’s iOS operating system, downplaying the ramifications of such a decision by echoing the FBI’s claims that they’re only asking for Apple to unlock an iPhone in “one particular case.”

Apple was hit with a court order by the US government, which demanded that the tech giant provided an easier method of unlocking an iPhone found in a vehicle rented by those responsible for the San Bernardino shooting in 2015. Apple CEO Tim Cook responded to this demand by posting an open letter on the company’s official website, which stated that doing so would “undermine decades of security advancements.”

Apple CEO Tim Cook. (Image Credit: Justin Sullivan / Getty Images)

However, Microsoft founder Bill Gates has now weighed in on the unprecedented court case, siding with the FBI and suggesting that Apple is exaggerating the issue. Speaking with the Financial Times, Gates said: “This is a specific case where the government is asking for access to information. They are not asking for some general thing; they are asking for a particular case,”

He continued: “It is no different than [the question of] should anybody ever have been able to tell the phone company to get information, should anybody be able to get at bank records. Let’s say the bank had tied a ribbon around the disk drive and said ‘don’t make me cut this ribbon because you’ll make me cut it many times’.”

Gates’ comments go against the tide of popular opinion, with the likes of Google CEO Sundar Pichai and, weirdly, Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg siding with Apple. Tim Cook sent out an email to Apple employees yesterday, thanking them for their support and calling for the FBI order to be dropped. Cook wrote: “This case is about much more than a single phone or a single investigation, so when we received the government’s order we knew we had to speak out. At stake is the data security of hundreds of millions of law-abiding people, and setting a dangerous precedent that threatens everyone’s civil liberties.”

 


 

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