“Clinton signed documents declaring she had turned over all of her work-related emails. We now know that is not true.”— Peter Schweizer, politico.com
“Break classification rules for the public's benefit, and you could be exiled. Do it for personal benefit, and you could be President.”— Edward SnowdenVerified account, twitter.com
“There is a very real tension here — criminals either have encryption like the rest of us, or no one does — and it's on us to make the argument that we collectively have much more to lose than criminals have to gain”— Ben Thompson, stratechery.com
“Let me be absolutely crystal clear: this bill, absent massive changes (which, given the previous statements of its authors — Democrat Diane Feinstein of California and Republican Richard Burr of North Carolina — is highly unlikely) is an unmitigated disaster. The only way for any company to abide by…”— Ben Thompson, stratechery.com
“The FBI agreed Wednesday to help an Arkansas prosecutor unlock an iPhone and iPod belonging to two teenagers accused of killing a couple, just days after the federal agency announced it had gained access to an iPhone linked to the gunman in a mass shooting in California.”— Claudia Lauer, abcnews.go.com
“The little-known Japanese company at the center of a legal tussle between Apple Inc. and the U.S. government over the hacking of an iPhone built its business on pinball game machines and stumbled into the mobile phone security business almost by accident.”— Monami Yui, bloomberg.com