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Apple-FBI fight may be first salvo in bigger war

Friday, March 18, 2016

Associated Press

SAN FRANCISCO

The Apple-FBI fight may just be the opening salvo in a broader war over encryption, as technology companies continue to lock up their users’ messages, photos and other data to shield them from thieves and spies – and, incidentally, criminal investigators.

WhatsApp, the globally popular messaging system owned by Facebook, already has run into trouble on this front in Brazil. WhatsApp encrypts all user messages in “end to end” fashion, meaning that no one but the sender and recipient can read them. Brazilian authorities arrested a Facebook executive earlier this month after the company said it couldn’t unscramble encrypted messages sought by police.

U.S. officials are debating how to enforce a similar wiretap order for Whats-App communications in a U.S. criminal case, The New York Times reported. WhatsApp started as a way to exchange written messages over the Internet, but it has added services such as photo-sharing and voice calling, while gradually building encryption into all those formats.

Spokesmen for Whats-App and the Justice Department declined to comment on the Times report, which said the wiretap order had been sealed to keep details secret. The Brazilian case is still pending, although the Facebook executive was released from jail after a day.

For now, U.S. authorities and the tech industry are watching for the outcome of Apple’s legal battle against the FBI, which wants to force the company to help unlock an encrypted iPhone used by one of the San Bernardino mass shooters. But as more companies explore adding encryption, further confrontations are likely.

“I think we can say, without a doubt, there’s going to be more pressure on app-makers now,” said Nate Cardozo, staff attorney at the Electronic Frontier Foundation.