Legal showdown of 2016: FBI v. Apple

Apple’s Tim Cook and FBI director James Comey
Apple’s Tim Cook and FBI director James Comey

In the past year, one Apple (AAPL) news story proved more memorable than the latest version of the iPhone. In February, the tech giant took a public stand against the FBI’s request that it unlock a gunman’s iPhone, and a weeks-long standoff ensued.

While the FBI eventually figured out how to access the phone without Apple’s help, it’s worth revisiting its fight against Apple. Other privacy disputes between the FBI and tech giants that guard your personal data and devices may very well play out in 2017 and beyond.

Moreover, on Jan. 20, the US will inaugurate a new president who called for a boycott of Apple products after it refused to help the FBI unlock the phone. Donald Trump, and his attorney general pick, Jeff Sessions, may end up valuing national security concerns over privacy, Cornell Law School professor Michael Dorf told Yahoo Finance.

”Even if all I cared about was security, it’s not obvious to me here that privacy is the enemy of security,” said Dorf, who teaches Constitutional law, among other subjects. “But I fear that the Trump/Sessions administration will simply view this through a conventional ‘law and order’ lens and regard assertions of privacy as simply impeding security.”

Of course, Apple also accused the FBI under the Obama administration of threatening the security of its customers’ data.

The dispute became public in February with a judge’s order mandating that Apple help the FBI unlock a phone used by a perpetrator of a mass shooting last year. Apple refused.

‘An unprecedented step’

In December 2015, 14 people were killed in a shooting at a state-run facility in San Bernardino, Calif., which injured 22 others. Treating the massacre as a terrorist attack, the FBI asked Apple for help unlocking an iPhone used by one of the two perpetrators.

When Apple balked at the FBI’s request, the US government filed a 40-page court document seeking to force the tech giant to unlock the phone used by Syed Farook, one of the two attackers along with his wife, Tashfeen Malik. Both died the day of their attack.

However, before they died, Malik expressed her allegiance to the Islamic State. US investigators believed Farook’s iPhone might hold clues about the attack on the Inland Regional Center, a facility for people with developmental disabilities. But the FBI couldn’t unlock Farook’s phone without his passcode. What’s more, agents couldn’t even try to guess the password. That’s because Apple gives users the option to have all their iPhone data erased after 10 failed passcode attempts.

“Apple has the exclusive technical means which would assist the government in completing its search,” the US government argued in its request to the court.