To my mind, the problem there is the legal framework permitting these warrantless “emergency” requests in the first place. You can hardly blame Apple for responding to an email from a compromised police address; they have no way of knowing it’s compromised.
How secure is their system If they are not able to verify an official email from a scam email?
It sounds like you may not have read the article. It’s not like they fell for a phishing email; bad actors had access to the actual police email servers.
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To my mind, the problem there is the legal framework permitting these warrantless “emergency” requests in the first place. You can hardly blame Apple for responding to an email from a compromised police address; they have no way of knowing it’s compromised.
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It sounds like you may not have read the article. It’s not like they fell for a phishing email; bad actors had access to the actual police email servers.
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I’m not saying you’re wrong in principle, or that Big Tech is trustworthy. Just that in this specific instance, the fault doesn’t lie with Apple.
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