95 comments

  • amelius 2 hours ago

    Including Apple. If it's that easy, how long do we really expect Advanced Data Protection to be free from government backdooring?

    • gruez an hour ago

      >If it's that easy, how long do we really expect Advanced Data Protection to be free from government backdooring?

      Taking down an app is hardly unprecedented. Forcing companies to add backdoors in secret is, so it's a stretch to think that ADP is compromised.

      • bigyabai 38 minutes ago

        > Forcing companies to add backdoors in secret is

        We have precedent: https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2023/12/apple-admits-to-...

          Apple has since confirmed in a statement provided to Ars that the US federal government “prohibited” the company “from sharing any information,”
        • gruez 20 minutes ago

          "secretly sharing notification data" (ie. asking for records kept in the usual course of business[1]) is not the same as "forcing companies to add backdoors in secret"

          [1] https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/28/1732

          • bigyabai 9 minutes ago

            Thinking something is "unprecedented" is not an argument against it happening. Apple has surprised us before, I see no reason to expect ADP is any different.

    • dixie_land 2 hours ago

      Was it ever?

      • Tagbert 2 hours ago

        The British Government believes it to be secure. That’s why they were asking for a back door.

        • amelius an hour ago

          Brits: can we have access to the backdoor?

          Apple: sure, but only if you pretend you didn't get access

          Brits: jolly good

        • lambdasquirrel 41 minutes ago

          That only means that the UK government doesn’t have access to the backdoor.

          • breppp 39 minutes ago

            according to the snowden documents it is quite obvious that if the US government had a backdoor then the UK government would have one through five eyes

        • eesmith 2 hours ago

          Another way to interpret it is they think it's secure against the British Government, and were asking for the same back door the US has.

        • OutOfHere 2 hours ago

          It's just that the British Government doesn't have access to the backdoor whereas the American Government does have it. It's in no way secure.

  • sys32768 2 hours ago

    The Censorship-Industrial Complex is troubling no matter which party benefits.

    • throwawaypath 32 minutes ago

      Sad this may be considered a "problematic" opinion to some. The extremes on both sides root for censorship when their political enemies are the target.

    • imperio59 10 minutes ago

      Yes. During COVID so many opinions were censored, including the medical opinion of actual Medical doctors and experts, if it did not fit the "accepted narrative".

      Now we certainly see some excesses with companies like Palantir and others ramping up government surveillance.

      Each side ramps up the encroachment on privacy and civil liberties without realizing the next time the other side comes into power they will gladly use and abuse everything the previous administration put in place during their rule.

  • dizlexic 12 minutes ago

    Of course they do. We gave the DHS (and any other government agency) far too much power and they flex it.

    We have so many agencies that can regulate businesses to death without any congressional intervention that it would be beyond idiotic to stand against them.

    Not to mention that it's been proven again and again that the American populations attention span is far too short to do anything meaningful about the aforementioned powers / abuses.

    Maybe it's age, or the attention I've paid to the erosion of liberties post 9/11. but is this headline a surprise to anyone?

    • graemep 3 minutes ago

      They also usually cooperate with government around the world. The "must abide by their laws thing"

  • like_any_other 2 hours ago

    > Unless there’s proof of incitement to violence or a true threat, such expression is protected.

    AFAIK the bar is even higher - incitement to violence is allowed, as long as it's not 'imminent': https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Imminent_lawless_action

    • HighGoldstein an hour ago

      The bar in the US right now seems to be if someone with any authority feels like killing you.

    • electrondood 19 minutes ago

      > Advocacy of force or criminal activity does not receive First Amendment protections if (1) the advocacy is directed to inciting or producing imminent lawless action, and (2) is likely to incite or produce such action.

      You'd need to say something which directs others to violate the law or commit acts of violence, at a specific time ("imminent"), and your statement must be likely to be effective at causing them to do so.

      Protesting, encouraging others to protest, expressing your political beliefs, organizing a protest, etc. are not incitement to violence. Nor is "doxxing" (filming, identifying) a public employee. None of these activities satisfy those criteria.

      Remember the "Twitter files" nonsense? I recall they were upset at the government influencing the expression of political views on social media. Not hearing much backlash about this from the same people, because this is what they were claiming, but 100x worse.

  • arduanika 2 hours ago

    Careful before trusting that any of the quotes in this article are real! Default assumption should be that it's all hallucinated unless you've checked it personally. They don't check it in-house.

    https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47013059

  • jmyeet an hour ago

    What I find most interesting about this is that US tech companies are doing what people accuse China of doing.

    In fact, theoretical Chinese informed was the entire (performative) justification for the Tiktok ban. The reality of course was that TikTok wouldn’t censor what the US government wanted to censor.

    The irony is that these companies are sowing the seeds for their own destruction and the US government is undermining US tech dominance, which is a potent foreign policy tool.

    I think Steve Jobs would be rolling over in his grave at Tim Cook’s capitalization. I once trusted Apple to be more user-forest than any other platform. Now? I think I’d trust Huawei more.

    • kdheiwns an hour ago

      At this point I think the biggest tangible difference between China and the US is that one country has high speed trains and affordable health care and the other has neither.

      • XenophileJKO an hour ago

        This kind of reductionist pithy comparison needs to stay on Reddit. Sure stuff is messed up here, but there are very real differences in both the degree and breadth of government abuse of power when you compare with China.

        • srcreigh 24 minutes ago

          Care to elaborate?

          • SpicyLemonZest 8 minutes ago

            As an American, I can freely oppose the current regime. I routinely say, both online and in real life under my government name, that Donald Trump and his cronies are criminals, that everyone should work hard to stop them from achieving their goals and ideally they should all get life sentences once we throw them out of office. I’ll never face legal or even professional consequences for saying this, and even within the most authoritarian regime in generations few officials argue that I should.

            Unless I’ve been severely misinformed, someone saying similar things about Xi Jinping on a Chinese tech forum would be swiftly banned and likely arrested.

      • mktk1001 an hour ago

        No one's murdering innocent citizens on the streets of China

        • AnIrishDuck 6 minutes ago

          This is an especially hilarious comment given what happened in June 1989 [1].

          It's the prototypical example of authoritarian crackdowns and mass slaughter of innocent protestors.

          Discussion or even mention of it is still forbidden in China.

          1. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1989_Tiananmen_Square_protests...

        • polairscience 36 minutes ago

          Uh.This has happened plenty. It's pretty well known that there's a lot of various abductions/disappearances of people the Chinese govt doesn't like. Including outright deaths in the streets:

          https://rsf.org/en/beaten-death-state-security-rsf-shocked-g...

        • basket_horse an hour ago
        • hasperdi an hour ago

          No the murders happen in camps eg. What's happening to the Uyghurs.

          That said, they also use them as slave labors.

          Maybe that's what ICE is going to do with the plan to setup large detention centers in the US

          • hypeatei an hour ago

            Look up the "zero idleness" program at CECOT where the Trump administration is sending deportees.

            • SmirkingRevenge 18 minutes ago

              They've been successfully blocked (for now). No current deportees are headed there so far as I know. But they are busy trying to build the system right here at home.

              ICE detention is already beginning to resemble the Salvadoran prison system.

              Due process rights get violated. Detainees get shuttled around to different facilities to be lost in the system through engineered incompetence, making it difficult for legal counsel or family to find them, or even to know who has been taken. They subject them to torturous conditions, abuse, and often hold people who've committed no crimes for months.

              They are thwarting oversight and defying court orders left and right. And they are trying to scale up like 10x+. And once they do, the detention system won't just be for immigrants. They are going to target anyone they want.

              D's have successfully blocked DHS funding for now, but if they (or SCOTUS) allow any of this to go forward, things are likely to get far worse

  • jmclnx 2 hours ago

    What a surprise, IIRC in Hong Kong there was a platform that was fully decentralized. HK protesters used it on their phones during their uprising and China could not block it.

    Maybe it is time people move to that. Sadly I forgot its name or where to get it. Of course the app stores could block that too.

    There is always USENET I guess. I wonder if there are apps on Cell Phones that can access USENET and format the posts to work with the small screens. And of course reformat posts to comply to USENET formatting requirements (ie: wordwrap at Col 70).

    • latexr an hour ago

      > Sadly I forgot its name or where to get it.

      Are you thinking of HKmap.live?

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HKmap.live

      > Of course the app stores could block that too.

      And Apple did.

      https://www.bbc.com/news/business-49995688

    • graemep 12 minutes ago

      > Of course the app stores could block that

      That is the problem with technical solutions. Governments can ban them, or mandate on device scanning to monitor your usage.

    • Quothling 2 hours ago

      Bridgefy, Firechat, Bitchat and other bluetooth/wifi peer-to-peer SoMe's are great as long as you're enough people around. As long as you don't rely on one of the big tech app stores (or use an iPhone), it's not hard to get them even when the government is being tyrannical. It would be interesting to build something that would work over the various IoT networks which basically span all of Europe, but I guess that would be hard in countries where there are large areas of "nothing". It also depends on farmers choosing open source technology for their tech since you'd need a lot of farming IoT equipment to connect cross rural areas.

      • embedding-shape 2 hours ago

        > It would be interesting to build something that would work over the various IoT networks which basically span all of Europe, but I guess that would be hard in countries where there are large areas of "nothing".

        A portable device that could effortless hook up to the existing decentralized wireless networks would be even better, Freifunk covers large part of Germany, Guifi covers large parts of Spain, probably there are more somewhere else too, but AFAIK there is no portable device that lets you easily just connect and chat, still requires a bit of setup to participate.

    • Tha_14 an hour ago

      Anything that is P2P E2EE is hard to block by utilizing traditional measures. Personally I use and trust Tox. If you also want anonimity you can pair it with tor.

      • malfist 33 minutes ago

        All apple has to do is remove it from the app store. Doesn't matter how P2P or E2EE it is.

    • OutOfHere 2 hours ago

      A centralized platform with marginally cleverer cryptography can technically allow posts and comments to belong to a user, but not be traceable back to the user! When asked by the government who made a particular post or comment, it should not be possible for the platform to readily identify who made it. Of course the IP address should not be tracked either, certainly not beyond 1h. The logged in user would still be able to view and manage all of their posts and comments, also see responses, because they would have the cryptography key to do so. So what about spam and guardrail control -- one solution is to let AI classify it. Much more can be possible with cleverer uses of cryptography. In short, it is not formally necessary to switch to a decentralized or federated solution to address the anonymity issue.

  • tehjoker 2 hours ago

    All the tech ceos are on the trump train this time around, it was a specific strategy of the trump campaign. Using words like “caved” as though they were pressured and not already aligned with the government is a disservice.

    • michaelt 2 hours ago

      I interpret ‘caved’ in this context to mean they’re not gaining much in return - they make a loss by doing this, just they make an even bigger loss if they were targets of a Trump tantrum.

      • soco 22 minutes ago

        Judging by the financial reports they don't make any loss doing this, quite the opposite. Let's not weep where no weeping is due.

      • tehjoker 2 hours ago

        That’s fair, I don’t think the CEOs are fully aligned culturally with Trump but they are sick of pretending to be liberals that care about other people and they want to make more money.

        • latexr an hour ago

          > I don’t think the CEOs are fully aligned culturally with Trump

          Does it matter? If all their actions are in support of a regime, does it matter if they secretly don’t agree with it and don’t even say it? Does it matter that your neighbour says they don’t agree with ICE of they still rat you out to them? Ideologies without action aren’t worth much. At this point, we should assume these CEOs are fully on board with and support Trump’s policies. There’s no reason to make up excuses that they might not be when they repeatedly demonstrate the opposite.

          • malfist 35 minutes ago

            In the Nuremberg trails I doubt "but I secretly didn't believe we should kill all the Jews" would have passed muster.

        • api 2 hours ago

          Depends on who you mean. Some of them are nodding and smiling while they count the days until Trump dies. Some of them are “pilled” and totally on board.

          • embedding-shape an hour ago

            And ultimately the consequences of both group is the same. The only way to get rid of fascism is to fight against it, there is no "neutral" position possible unfortunately.

    • davidw 44 minutes ago

      May shame and disgrace follow them for the rest of their lives.

      Having been around for a while, to go from optimistic, but sort of naive techno-libertarianism that was once a thing in Silicon Valley to kissing up to a would-be authoritarian is a very sad arc.

    • yoyohello13 an hour ago

      They know what they are doing. To survive as a large entity during this administration you have to kiss the ring. If you don't, you'll get targeted for being 'woke' or whatever. In fact, kissing Trump's ass is more important for success than actually making a good product at this point.

      I definitely don't think what these CEOs are doing is moral, but it's certainly rational.

      • embedding-shape 41 minutes ago

        No, the matter of fact is that Apple would survive no matter what. But would they (the people involved, not the company, Cook & other executives) make as much money if they went against the administration compared to how much they could make while playing along? Also no, and is why you're seeing people bowing down, they personally make much more money then.

      • davidw 43 minutes ago

        Kissing up to the bully just means they come back to extort you for more the next time. I don't think it's even rational behavior.

      • scblock an hour ago

        This is unacceptable behavior, and terrible that anyone would think this way. You're telling me that if Tim Cook wasn't getting on his knees every couple of weeks Apple would end? That's farcical.

        • michaelt 6 minutes ago

          > You're telling me that if Tim Cook wasn't getting on his knees every couple of weeks Apple would end? That's farcical.

          I think that a 30%, 64% or 145% tax on Chinese imports would be a huge blow for a $400 billion business importing Chinese-made phones.

          And Trump can impose such taxes (and grant exemptions from them) at will, apparently.

  • trollbridge an hour ago

    Now I experience doubt when I read this article whether the journalist actually interviewed anybody, or just cut and pasted ChatGPT.

  • ggfdh 2 hours ago

    Now that it’s targeting dems, maybe can get some bipartisan support to limit government power here.

    • logicchains 12 minutes ago

      That'll never work; what works is building un-censorable platforms, that cannot be banned in the same way it's impossible to ban torrents no matter how hard they try.

  • ttul 2 hours ago

    I wonder how much the tech bros are going to regret having bent over for Trump in 2028 when a Democrat is sitting in the Whitehouse looking at rolling out some retribution using the new legal tools the Trump team succeeded in securing during his second term. We might see some heavy regulation descending onto the industry as a response.

    On the other hand, the long term trend of billionaires and large companies getting their way politically will likely continue.

    • plagiarist 2 hours ago

      "When?" There is still plenty of time for the Reichstag fire.

    • ndsipa_pomu an hour ago

      How is a Democrat going to be sitting in the Whitehouse when Trump/Vance is still there with a large contingency of loyal armed ICE agents looking to target dissenters?

    • yoyohello13 an hour ago

      > I wonder how much the tech bros are going to regret having bent over for Trump in 2028.

      I'm going to guess they'll have fled the country with their winnings by then.

    • rzerowan 44 minutes ago

      Not much is what im expecting - they will bend the knee as always , most people forget that very similar actions were being done under Biden - their targets were different : Covid and some anti grnocide protests.

      The tools once there will be expanded and continu ding what the gov of the day wants - same reason ICE , Pathriot act ,FISA etc saw their largest expansions after Obama came into power.

      Targets will change but the tools will remain , aftter some sanitization youll even have proICE dems boosting.

  • cyanydeez 2 hours ago

    Licking the boot provides shareholder value.

  • tjpnz 2 hours ago

    I thought Republicans were for small government and were anti-censorship.

    • kayodelycaon 2 hours ago

      They were also supposed to be for state’s rights.

      My entire life it’s been about nothing more than domination of the “immoral” and the end justifies any means when the alternative is someone else winning the vote.

      They are the people the phrase “there is no hate like Christian love” is referring to.

    • dsabanin 2 hours ago

      Turned out they just were the selfish assholes everyone always said they were, with everything they say just being poor attempts at rationalization of their deep lack of morals, including their self-serving primitive religion.

    • HighGoldstein an hour ago

      > I thought Republicans were for small government and were anti-censorship.

      They are against very specific parts of big government and censorship

    • gruez an hour ago

      It's not hard to find similar dunks for the other side, eg. "I thought Democrats were for bodily autonomy" (with regards to vaccine mandates/passports) or "I thought liberals were for free speech" (with regards to cancel culture).

      • p_j_w 24 minutes ago

        >"I thought Democrats were for bodily autonomy" (with regards to vaccine mandates/passports)

        The liberal position on bodily autonomy (and indeed most things) has never been absolute. If an action is likely to cause harm to others (and forgoing a vaccine in the midst of a deadly pandemic is indeed likely to cause harm to others), then reasonable action to curtail the harm is justified. As recently as the 2010s, both parties supported vaccine mandates. I remember conservatives making fun of the antivax movement as liberal lunacy as recently as 2019.

        >"I thought liberals were for free speech" (with regards to cancel culture).

        Cancel culture is itself a form of free expression and association.

      • malfist 31 minutes ago

        Free speech absolutely does not mean free from consequences speech.

        • gruez 23 minutes ago

          I don't think you realize it, but your retort could be easily applied to the story in the OP just as easily as it could be applied to cancel culture. The point isn't whether either side is "right" or not, but that both side's positions shouldn't be distilled down to 1 liner dunks like the original commenter was engaging in.

    • croes an hour ago

      Remember, it’s only censorship if they block what I want to say, if the block what I don’t like it’s for the greater good

    • somenameforme an hour ago

      These articles are actively mixing two very different topics: claims of people simply criticizing ICE, and people who are reporting on officer locations or otherwise providing information that could viably result in danger to the officers, difficulty enforcing the law, and so on. I think you'll very few conservatives would be supportive of the censorship of criticism, but many and probably the overwhelming majority would be supportive of censoring information of the latter type.

      If there are genuine aims to censor or target Americans who are genuinely simply criticizing ICE, I don't understand why the media isn't naming names with their permission. For instance when Jay Bhattacharya was revealed as one of the people censored for having contrarian views on COVID related decisions, I think it was a major turning point because it made it clear that the censorship extended to the point of censoring highly qualified people simply for having different opinions.

      • AngryData 34 minutes ago

        Are we not allowed to know where cops are operating? I would support all US cops and ICE and any other state sponsored authority to wear GPS and body cameras at all times.

      • oceansky an hour ago

        They are both fully legal.

        • somenameforme an hour ago

          That's, at the minimum, debatable. The primary point of people reporting on the location if ICE agents is to enable other people to evade or interfere with law enforcement. And that walks right into the illegal zone in various ways - accessory, obstruction, interference, aiding and abetting, and so on.

          • oceansky 43 minutes ago

            Pointing out police checkpoints aren't illegal. Waze is partially based on that.

    • fanatic2pope 2 hours ago

      I mean obviously they never were. I think what really surprised people is that it turns out that despite it's supposed "libertarian" roots, the tech community has largely broken hard right authoritarian when the rubber hits the road. Kind of reinforcing the old adage that libertarians are just republicans who want to legally smoke weed.

    • JCattheATM 2 hours ago

      No, that's just the nonsense they say to hide their bigotry/fascism focused goals.

    • Braxton1980 2 hours ago

      This is why the both sides argument is frustrating to hear.

      Yes. Both sides censor people. I'm sure we'll see a comment about Biden censoring anti covid vaccine posts and the poster is somewhat right.

      The difference is the Republicans run on freedom of speech making them hypocrites.

      Being a hypocrite is the worst attribute a politician can have in a representative democracy

      • wredcoll an hour ago

        I'm not sure it's the worst attribute you can have, but I definitely agree with the sentiment.

        As I've gotten older, I've become less fond of slippery slope style arguments. People love making them for censorship-related rules and laws.

        "Oh if <biden> is allowed to ask/tell social media to stop publishing so many lies about covid then that means trump will be able to <whatever>"

        First of all, trump and his ilk are probably going to do <whatever> regardless of what people did in the past and the technical legality of the actions seems to be of only minor concern.

        Secondly, I hate this idea that laws and rules can't have nuances. We can, with our collective brain power, probably come up with a law that helps reduce covid lies and doesn't also apply to government criticism or whatever.

        I get the appeal of a simple "all speech is free! No laws about speech allowed!" But fairly obviously you're going to have laws about fraud/threats/slander/"porn" at which point we're back to nuances and deciding which bits we allow and where.

        As for modern republicans, I'm not old enough to have ever believed their states rights/small gov/freedom lies, but I thought I could at least count on them to be anti-russia invading other countries.

    • __s 2 hours ago

      That'd be the Libertarian Party

  • api 2 hours ago

    Large corporations, especially publicly traded ones, have zero power to resist their sovereign government. Publicly traded companies are heavily regulated and dependent on their stock price, making them trivially vulnerable to political retaliation.

    I’m not sure why people look to corporations for political resistance. It’s the wrong place to look. They’re not structured for it and it’s not their purpose.

    • svachalek 2 hours ago

      Corporations are people and money is speech, making corporations the strongest forces in politics. Obviously they're not on your side but there's no mystery why people would want to influence them.

    • rzerowan 2 hours ago

      All the more ironic when those selfsame corps act as arms of govenment agaist official enemy governments/people. See the recent brouhaha by Facebok over getting banned from Russia and years previously from China over pretty similar demands.

      And the way they all fell inline with sanctioning the ICC (Microsoft/Google) when the only laws in play were US domestic ones being pushed globally.

    • coffeefirst an hour ago

      Then what’s all the lobbying money for?

    • mfuzzey 2 hours ago

      I disagree.

      Sure corporations have to respect the LAW in their juradiction, even if said law is unpopular or unethical. But they don't have to, and shouldn't where ethics and human rights are involved, go beyond what is required by the law. Since Trump has come to power a lot of big organsations seem to be reversing their previous positions to gain political favour, which is wrong.

      The solution is probably for them to appeal to the public. "We stand up to ICE abuse" would probably help them in the markets.

      Something interesting happened recently in France where it turned out that the American subsiduary of CapGemini was selling serives to ICE. They were forced to sell that subsiduary after public outcry.

      • api 2 hours ago

        One Trump tweet can destroy a company’s stock price. Trump has amazing power over public companies as the absolute king of the attention economy.

        • nilamo 42 minutes ago

          I wish I understood how that works. Retail investors are so small, compared with hedge funds and whatnot, that "average people" cannot move a stock price significantly. So, when Trump tweets about a company, how does the stock move? Who is actually doing all that selling to drive the price down?

          And, since the price almost always recovers within a week... does it even matter?

        • convolvatron an hour ago

          its not just the tweets. this administration came out of the gate swinging with its extortionate demands. it claims the power to redirect, cancel, and append conditions to congressional funding. its has as its disposal all of the departments who ostensibly exist to serve the populace, and use them to file lawsuits, charge people with crimes, remove or establish new regulations or targeted taxes, all in service of whatever the president might desire.

          • dashundchen 41 minutes ago

            Again and again with the fascists, the accusation of weaponization of government was really a confession of their own crimes.

            Same with the Epstein files, same with the accusations of groomer while their ranks are filled with rapists, same with the Jan 6 insurrection, and likely this fall, accusations of election fraud and intimidation.