- Apple granted the FBI access to the iCloud account of a protester accused of setting police cars on fire in Seattle this summer, according to court documents. - Once it had access to the protester's account, the FBI found screenshots of an Instagram post promoting the protest, a screenshot of a recipe for a Molotov cocktail, and videos of "a green glass bottle" in an unzipped backpack. - It's routine for Apple to comply with court-issued search warrants, but the cooperation contrasts with Attorney General William Barr's previous complaints that Apple has hindered investigations by refusing to help unlock suspects' iPhones. [...] Apple disclosed the name, email, phone number, and residential address associated with Jackson's account, then subsequently granted the FBI access to the contents of Jackson's account in response to a court-ordered search warrant. Continua su https://www.businessinsider.com/apple-fbi-icloud-investigation-seattle-prote... Notate come non si tratti esclusivamente di "meta-dati": anche i contenuti archiviati su iCloud sono disponibili a Apple (ed al law enforcement statunitense). NON sono dunque cifrati con una chiave ad esclusiva disposizione dell'utente (end-to-end) con buona pace dei creduloni che si lasciano abbindolare dal marketing di Apple sulla privacy. Giacomo