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by Alupis
3777 days ago
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> > The counter from the governmental side is "we will give your company massive fines until and unless your company complies". > At which point is becomes worth it for Apple to pay an engineer to do the job. I doubt it wouldn't take much of a bonus to get someone to do it. What happens if Apple says they aren't paying these unjust fines? Theoretically, court order, law, or what-have-you, Apple can just straight refuse to participate (and hopefully other big tech companies would follow suit). Sure the gov't can make arrests, threats, seize assets -- but in the end, the gov't still don't get what they want (but they do get a ton of very, very bad PR in the process). At a point, the gov't would have to stop -- destroying the world's most valuable company, and one of America's sweetheart companies, all over this... wouldn't play out well. |
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Then they'll be subject to additional penalties, seizure of property, etc., and quite possibly shareholder lawsuits stemming from the decision to incur those losses.
> Sure the gov't can make arrests, threats, seize assets -- but in the end, the gov't still don't get what they want
Maybe, given the recent discussion of mandatory limits on encrypted communication services without up-front backdoors, what the government wants is a clear demonstration that the operation of those services interferes with evidence and intelligence gathering in terrorism cases to build the case for new laws restricting the operations of such services.