I previously posted on another topic that when a corporation commits C crimes that each carry Y years in confinement (prison time or jail time,) the total years in confinement (C * Y) should be divided by the share of the corporation someone owns and that stockholder should be sentenced to that amount of time. So if a stockholder owns 1/S of a company, that stockholder should be sentenced to CY/S years.
If Facebook committed 100 billion felonies (where each intercepted message is a felony,) and each would carry 5 years in prison if I did it, then there are 500 billion years in confinement to divide between the stock holders. If someone owns $1,024 of Facebook stock (which is one-one-billionth of the total) then that stick holder would be sentenced to 500 years in confinement in a just system.
We do not have a just system, but there are those if us who will fight for one.
Perhaps the boys and girls at fed.gov can move 0.0001% of the way towards justice by seizing Facebook, liquidating the company, and handing out any money that is left to the people whose accounts were spied on.
Of course all if this assumes that each and every employee or former employee or contractor at Facebook who knew about this never, ever gets out of confinement.
How on earth does one App man in the middle another App’s traffic? This is a huge security vulnerability! If Facebook can install an App like this on iOS or Android, then other companies could do a similar thing.
I will save you the long read. They paid people (incl teens) through third-parties (so that it's not easily traced to FB) to install kits on their phones to let them MITM Snapchat analytics traffic.
Maybe Americans should tame their Elites into like not destroying Republic abroad and not fund genocidal maniacs. Heard it helps not having governments being hostile towards yours.
Imagine if the DOJ case against Apple prevails and rivals begin distributing their own iOS apps through alternate app stores and obtain unencumbered access to currently-private system APIs.
This is silly. Open platforms use TLS, too, and there's no epidemic of trivial failures of encryption; you can't just add root certs willy-nilly because crypto engineers knew that was the most obvious attack vector.
FB did this by paying folk to consensually MITM their own traffic, and frankly any system that wouldn't allow users to do that on their own devices is a bad one.
Interesting thought. Perhaps the cat-and-mouse game of megacorps defending/expanding their turf through software/hardware boundaries isn't the best mechanism to achieve consumer protection.
If only there was something like consumer protection law. But you know, did consumer protection instead of waging proxy wars for megacorps to defend/expand their turf.
Sure, regulations and legal systems are important. However, they can fail to protect people in situations where technology would offer greater protection and vice-versa.
For example, Benjamin Franklin applied his technical skill as a publisher to engineer dollars that were more difficult to counterfeit. The illegality of counterfeiting on its own could not prevent counterfeiting, so technology was also availed.
It’s critical for us to recognize that technology is a critical component to our security, not merely an alternative to regulation.
Why can't/shouldn't we encourage Apple to invest in on-device runtime security instead of a fallible App Store review process that might not even be relevant anyways? If any software has uninhibited access to hardware APIs, that seems like a software security issue that needs to be solved, not an ironclad justification for the App Store.
The DOJ case is requesting the opposite of your proposal. Although the alternate app store angle is what has been featured in the headlines, the case also requests for Apple to make various private iOS APIs available to 3rd-party apps, so if the DOJ prevails then the judge’s ruling could make various forms of API access limits illegal for all impacted APIs.
That part I agree with - If Apple is willing to create an API, they shouldn't be allowed to use it anticompetitively. Apple is just going to have to learn how to cope with third-parties having access to their APIs.
Nothing is stopping Apple from creating a more secure runtime for iOS apps. They are doing it right now with MacOS; I haven't heard a single legitimate excuse as to why iOS is different. Apple could be (and frankly SHOULD be) building a comprehensive user-controlled security menu that even lets them protect against Apple themselves.
The root user of an operating system has access to resources that should not be available to every application. That's not anticompetitive per se, but it is required for a secure computing system that preserves user privacy. It's a moot point to prevent software bugs that leak user data if the software is legally required to hand over user data.
If Facebook committed 100 billion felonies (where each intercepted message is a felony,) and each would carry 5 years in prison if I did it, then there are 500 billion years in confinement to divide between the stock holders. If someone owns $1,024 of Facebook stock (which is one-one-billionth of the total) then that stick holder would be sentenced to 500 years in confinement in a just system.
We do not have a just system, but there are those if us who will fight for one.
Perhaps the boys and girls at fed.gov can move 0.0001% of the way towards justice by seizing Facebook, liquidating the company, and handing out any money that is left to the people whose accounts were spied on.
Of course all if this assumes that each and every employee or former employee or contractor at Facebook who knew about this never, ever gets out of confinement.