Apple and Dropbox said Tuesday that they oppose a controversial cybersecurity bill that, according to critics, would give the government sweeping new powers to spy on Americans in the name of protecting them from hackers.
The announcement by the two companies comes days before the Senate expects to vote on the legislation, known as the Cybersecurity Information Sharing Act, or CISA.
"We don't support the current CISA proposal," Apple said in a statement. "The trust of our customers means everything to us and we don't believe security should come at the expense of their privacy."
Dropbox said that the bill needed more privacy protections in order to win its support.
(Score: 2) by Hyperturtle on Friday October 23 2015, @12:11AM
(I missed a span of years there in my haste to press next to continue and post the message. This is an addendum to my post...For those of you that do not remember, there was a Big Brother Inside logo campaign going on to bring attention to the government proposal to make everyone safe by putting in a government controlled encryption chip that by the means of which was not described to the public would for some reason never ever be crackable by anyone else and was purely to keep you and your fax machines and PDAs and storage devices totally safe and readable without requiring to beat you with a $5 wrench first because they could just get into it.
That initiative was defeated by many good people across the operating system ideology spectrums of the time [linux/windows/mac people, dos holdouts and then normal people like privacy advocates and so on]. It looks like the chip is no longer necessary for the government to compel organizations to get what they want, though.)