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by hvocode
1774 days ago
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I think the point is that yes, they have always had the power to do these things - but they haven't thus far. We rely on entities with power (companies, governments, people) to exercise restraint in how they exercise it. Those that DO exercise restraint gain trust since exercising restraint demonstrates an understanding of the consequences of not doing so. What the Apple move is doing is showing that they are willing to relax their restraint. It gets tricky because everyone agrees that the specific goal here is honorable, but the manner by which they are using their power to achieve it is generalizable to areas that are less honorable. Once they are willing to use their power to accomplish one highly honorable goal, it's not a big ask for them to use it for a slightly less honorable goal in the future. Iterate that a few times and you can find yourself in a very bad place. It's the classic slippery slope argument - when you know there is a slope that leads to dangerous places, you need to not ever start down it no matter how righteous the motive is in starting down that path in the first place. There's a reason we have the old saying "the path to hell is paved with good intentions". The existence of power isn't what matters: it's the intention and willingness to exercise it. Apple is now demonstrating that they have changed their stance in how they choose to exercise their extreme power. That's worthy of scrutiny. For a concrete example of where I expect this to naturally lead to: instead of a database of child pornography being the source of the hashes to search for, the Chinese government provides a set of hashes of all known digital photos of the Tianenmen square protests of 1989. Does it really seem implausible for a government like China's to NOT use this kind of technology for that purpose? It's not hard to cook up similar examples all over the place. |
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