Justice Department slams Apple's 'corrosive' rhetoric in its latest court filing
The DOJ accuses Apple of a "technological fiat" for resisting a court order to brute-force the San Bernardino shooter's iPhone.
Susie Ochs | 11 Mar | Read more
The DOJ accuses Apple of a "technological fiat" for resisting a court order to brute-force the San Bernardino shooter's iPhone.
Susie Ochs | 11 Mar | Read more
The San Bernardino case isn't the first time the company has refused to help the government unlock an iPhone.
Caitlin McGarry | 20 Feb | Read more
The company doesn't want apps installing root certificates on your iPhone for security reasons.
Caitlin McGarry | 09 Oct | Read more
Et tu, Google?
Caitlin McGarry | 29 Sep | Read more
Today's launch of Apple's in-demand iPhone 6S has mobile-security pundits hitting the pulpits to remind mobile users that increasingly capable mobile-payments platforms carry novel risks on top of existing exposure to data movement and fluidity.
David Braue | 25 Sep | Read more
Apple has made iOS 9 generally available to the public and the update rolling out across the globe will probably be one worth installing if not for new features then at least for the security fixes.
In early June, Apple said two-factor authentication would be tightly integrated into OS X 10.11 El Capitan and iOS 9, but provided little detail as to what that means. The current setup is scattered across sites and methods in order to deliver a second one-time use, time-limited code or other method of verification when a user logs in to an Apple site or on an Apple device with an Apple ID set up for it.
Glenn Fleishman | 09 Jul | Read more
Nestled in the middle of iOS 9 announcements were two security-related bumps: Apple now suggests you sete a six-digit passcode instead of a four-digit one; and two-factor authentication becomes a built-in part of iOS (and OS X) rather than an afterthought.
Glenn Fleishman | 10 Jun | Read more