i2Coalition Files Amicus Brief On Digital Security Implications In Apple Case
Today we filed with partners, an amicus brief supporting Apple’s opposition to the government’s request to undermine the iPhone’s security protocols.
i2Coalition articles and news updates regarding changes to United States Internet or technology polices.
Today we filed with partners, an amicus brief supporting Apple’s opposition to the government’s request to undermine the iPhone’s security protocols.
The Internet Association and Internet Infrastructure Coalition (i2Coalition) filed an amicus brief in the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California in the matter of the appeal of copyright suit Perfect 10 vs. USENET service Giganews.
Coalition members who met with the staffs of both Representatives during our fall fly-in conveyed to them the importance of this issue to their businesses.
It’s hard to forget that the company at the heart of the FBI encryption debate right now is Apple, literally the biggest company in the world.
Yesterday, Apple issued a message to their customers that built a public case for their commitment to fighting for data security. i2Coalition has released a statement in response.
Earlier this week, i2Coalition contacted the U.S. Department Of Commerce’s Office of Foreign Asset Control (OFAC) for clarity on issues of great importance to the Cloud community regarding the way global Internet commerce works online.
Hacking Accountability in Internet Governance w/ ISOC-DC! The i2Coalition will be hosting an DC Legal Hackers MeetUp in conjunction with the Washington DC chapter of the Internet Society. The meet up with be focused on Internet Governance and has a great line up. ISOC-DC and DC Legal Hackers proudly present: “Hacking Accountability in Internet Governance“. The event will be held on […]
Over the holidays, I ran into a good friend at a party who challenged the notion that encryption backdoors were something we should be fighting to prevent.
Senators Feinstein and Burr recently introduced legislation that would require companies to report to the government instances of terrorist activity taking place on their networks.
There has been a lot of talk about the U.S. “giving away the Internet” so let’s clear this up right now. The Internet isn’t anyone’s to give. No one entity controls the Internet.