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Judge: U.S. feds, cops can’t force you to unlock your iPhone with finger or face
lundi 14 janvier 2019, 18:26 , par Mac Daily News
“A California judge has ruled that American cops can’t force people to unlock a mobile phone with their face or finger,” Thomas Brewster reports for Forbes. “The ruling goes further to protect people’s private lives from government searches than any before and is being hailed as a potentially landmark decision.”
“Previously, U.S. judges had ruled that police were allowed to force unlock devices like Apple’s iPhone with biometrics, such as fingerprints, faces or irises. That was despite the fact feds weren’t permitted to force a suspect to divulge a passcode,” Brewster reports. “The order came from the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California in the denial of a search warrant for an unspecified property in Oakland. The warrant was filed as part of an investigation into a Facebook extortion crime, in which a victim was asked to pay up or have an ’embarassing’ video of them publicly released. The cops had some suspects in mind and wanted to raid their property. In doing so, the feds also wanted to open up any phone on the premises via facial recognition, a fingerprint or an iris. While the judge agreed that investigators had shown probable cause to search the property, they didn’t have the right to open all devices inside by forcing unlocks with biometric features.” “On the one hand, magistrate judge Kandis Westmore ruled the request was ‘overbroad’ as it was ‘neither limited to a particular person nor a particular device,'” Brewster reports. “But in a more significant part of the ruling, Judge Westmore declared that the government did not have the right, even with a warrant, to force suspects to incriminate themselves by unlocking their devices with their biological features… ‘If a person cannot be compelled to provide a passcode because it is a testimonial communication, a person cannot be compelled to provide one’s finger, thumb, iris, face, or other biometric feature to unlock that same device,’ the judge wrote.” Read more in the full article here. MacDailyNews Take: All hail U.S. Magistrate Judge Kandis Westmore for her common sense and eminently logical ruling! Here’s to the law finally beginning catching up with tech! Sometimes the law gets too cute. We shouldn’t leave common sense out of the equation. The process is the same thing. You’re getting access to someone’s most private information by forcing someone to give you the key. — Miami defense attorney David Oscar Markus, May 2016 — Ultimately… the U.S. Supreme Court will likely have to weigh in on this issue. — MacDailyNews, May 4, 2017 SEE ALSO: FBI forces suspect to unlock an Apple iPhone X with their face – October 1, 2018 Apple’s ‘cop button’ won’t keep your iPhone safe from the police – August 18, 2017 Florida man sentenced to 180 days in jail for not divulging his iPhone passcode – May 31, 2017 Florida judge orders reality TV actress to unlock Apple iPhone in ‘sextortion’ case – May 4, 2017 Miami sextortion case asks if a suspect can be forced to hand over Apple iPhone password – April 28, 2017 Feckless FBI unable to unlock iPhone, even with a ‘fingerprint unlock warrant’ – May 12, 2016 The Touch ID lock on your iPhone isn’t cop-proof – May 11, 2016 U.S. government wants your fingerprints to unlock your phone – May 1, 2016 Should you disable Touch ID for your own security? – May 9, 2016 U.S. government wants your fingerprints to unlock your phone – May 1, 2016 Virginia police can now force you to unlock your smartphone with your fingerprint – October 31, 2014 Apple’s Touch ID may mean U.S. iPhone 5s users can’t ‘take the fifth’ – September 12, 2013 Apple’s iPhone 5S with biometric identification: Big Brother’s dream? – September 11, 2013
macdailynews.com/2019/01/14/judge-u-s-feds-cops-cant-force-you-to-unlock-your-iphone-with-finger-or-...
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