Apple’s iPhone Encryption Is a Godsend, Even if Cops Hate It
"It took the upheaval of the Edward
Snowden revelations to make clear to everyone that we need protection
from snooping, governmental and otherwise. Snowden illustrated the
capabilities of determined spies, and said what security experts have
preached for years: Strong encryption of our data is a basic necessity,
not a luxury.
And now Apple, that quintessential mass-market supplier of
technology, seems to have gotten the message. With an eye to market
demand, the company has taken a bold step to the side of privacy, making
strong crypto the default for the wealth of personal information stored
on the iPhone. And the backlash has been as swift and fevered as it is
wrongheaded.
At issue is the improved iPhone encryption built into iOS 8. For the first time, all the important data on your phone—photos, messages, contacts, reminders, call history—are encrypted by default. Nobody but you can access the iPhone’s contents, unless your passcode is compromised, something you can make nearly impossible by changing your settings to replace your four-digit PIN with an alphanumeric password."
At issue is the improved iPhone encryption built into iOS 8. For the first time, all the important data on your phone—photos, messages, contacts, reminders, call history—are encrypted by default. Nobody but you can access the iPhone’s contents, unless your passcode is compromised, something you can make nearly impossible by changing your settings to replace your four-digit PIN with an alphanumeric password."
[Wired]
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