“Those who would give up
essential Liberty, to purchase a little temporary Safety, deserve neither
Liberty nor Safety” –
Benjamin Franklin
Terrorism and Privacy in
the Digital Age:
Being alive in our
present state of computer technology is very exciting. It also presents new
ethical issues surrounding the use of technology and our right to privacy. Case
in point; the San Bernardino husband and wife who opened fire killing 14
students and school administration in a special education facility in
California this past December. The husband and wife team claimed terrorist
connections and both suspects destroyed their iPhones before they were killed
by authorities. The debate on privacy vs. security stems from the male suspect,
Syed Farook, who had a work iPhone that was confiscated by authorities and a
federal court ordered software company Apple to hack into the accused terrorists'
work cell to obtain information. So far, Apple has refused to cooperate with
this court order.
So what does this mean
for privacy vs. security in our digital age? The article from USA Today, dated
February 20, 2016 "The terrorist's iPhone: Our view" http://www.usatoday.com/story/opinion/2016/02/18/apple-court-order-iphone-fbi-syed-farook-editorials-debates/80572492/ raised
this and other questions. Is Apple
responsible for creating software that can be hacked into for federal crimes
and investigations? What would this mean for Apple as far as consumers being
able to trust that their information cannot be hacked by entities outside of
Apple? Is it the duty of Apple to concede with the federal government or side
with the consumers for their privacy?
My initial gut answer to
this situation was to side with Apple software. I felt Apple owed it to the
consumer to protect their information, somewhat like a doctor / patient
confidentiality agreement. However, even in a doctor / patient confidentiality agreement, there is a disclaimer that says medical records can be subpoenaed by the courts. What makes this situation between
Apple and the federal government any different?
Perhaps there is
some comprise that can be created and the editorial article did make mention of this when it stated “The
best outcome to this showdown might be a compromise that keeps a
single-use-only key confined to Apple's headquarters, combined with
legislation that limits government access to extraordinary scenarios in
which lives are at stake”. This compromise makes sense, it seems reasonable and rational. Not
only does it respect the business ethics of Apple software, but it allows for the
government to investigate when crimes this heinous are committed. It seems in
this day and age privacy may have to take a back seat to safety.
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