And beside, what is to stop the technicians who actually perform the work, (or figure it out), from offering, for a large sum of cash, the procedure to either a competitor, or anybody else that might like it? Would Apple be willing to trust all involved?
SCOTUS should step in, because this is a Constitutional Question, and in that, they have the final say.
Originally Posted by Jackie S
As for the "procedure" ...Who is "Apple"? The company has no brain, nor ability to "actually perform the work"! "Apple" is a bunch of people .. who already know how to unscramble the encryption?
All this hand-wringing over "internal security" presupposes two "facts":
1. Apple is a living, breathing, and thinking entity separate from the employees, and
2. the developers of the encryption don't already know how to unscramble it.
The first one is elementary ... it is not a "fact"! The 2nd defies logic.
For those of you who have written software using even those most primitive of "language" have known that the testing of the accuracy of the software DEPENDS on testing the results by comparing the input data to the output data. The only way one can do that in this context is "unscramble" the encryption to verify the input data is the same as the output ... "unscrambled"!
In the "ancient" days it was tedious cards run through the "reader" in a room sized computer that your hand held can "out think" today. Then it was converted to magnetic tape. Repetition with writing, examining, tweaking, and and re-running the program ... until it was correct.