Apple to Obama: Don't let the FBI weaken phone encryption
Some of the world’s largest tech companies are planning to send a letter to President Obama today, asking him to reject any proposal to weaken the security of their products so that law enforcement can better view encrypted data.
“Whether you call them ‘front doors’ or ‘back doors’, introducing intentional vulnerabilities into secure products for the government’s use will make those products less secure against other attackers,” reads the letter, signed by 48 tech companies, including Apple, Facebook, Cisco Systems and Dropbox. Thirty-seven civil liberties groups, and a who’s who of security experts also signed the letter, which was obtained by the Washington Post.
“Every computer security expert that has spoken publicly on this issue agrees on [the problem of side doors for law enforcement], including the government’s own experts,” it says. Strong encryption, the letter claims, is the “cornerstone of the modern information economy’s security.”
The philosophical battle over what the government can and can’t ask of technology companies crossed into real life late last year, when Apple announced that the encryption strength of its iOS 8 mobile-operating system was so strong that it would be “technically unfeasible” to comply with government warrants for data. Only the user has the key to access the information.
“What concerns me about this is companies marketing something expressly to allow people to place themselves beyond the law,” responded FBI director James Comey. Shortly after, then-Attorney General Eric Holder echoed those concerns.
Apple has signaled that it will not back down. “If we don’t do everything we can to protect privacy, we risk more than money,” said Apple CEO Tim Cook at a government “cybersummit” earlier this year. “We risk our way of life.”
The confrontation between the opposing viewpoints came to a head late last month, when law enforcement officials tried to convince Congress that it should act to make sure investigators can access all kinds of encrypted data.
“What we’re asking for is not to lower [encryption] standards,” Amy Hess, executive assistant director of the FBI’s Science and Technology Branch, told the House Subcommittee on Information Technology. “Rather to come up with a way that we may be able to implement perhaps multiple keys or some other way to securely access that information, or rather be provided with that information.”
Technically, it is possible to give the FBI what it’s asking for, CATO scholar Julian Sanchez wrote earlier this year, but only theoretically. “The trouble, as any good information security pro will also tell you, is that real world systems are rarely as tidy as the theories, and the history of cryptography is littered with robust-looking cryptographic algorithms that proved vulnerable under extended scrutiny or were ultimately impossible to implement securely under real-world conditions,” wrote Sanchez.