{"title":"再咬一口苹果:根据《所有令状法》,联邦法院有权迫使政府特工在获取加密智能手机数据时提供技术援助","authors":"John L. Potapchuk","doi":"10.2139/SSRN.2768374","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The analogy is simple: imagine an unpickable and unbreakable lock. A safe-deposit box, or a house with no physical way in other than a unique passcode known only to the owner. Absolute security. This was generally the ideal behind Apple, Inc.’s most recent stride in mobile security, which dramatically widened the breadth of data receiving full-disk encryption by default on iPhones with the introduction of iOS 8 in 2014. The result for law enforcement has been hundreds of device search warrants unable to be executed. The heated public debate that has followed, which has largely focused on the nefarious potential of the uncompromising privacy this newly utilized encryption provides, has intensified amidst continuing efforts by government agents to obtain aid from the federal judiciary by means of orders under the All Writs Act. Although Apple had regularly complied with such orders directing the company to assist government agents in accessing locked iPhones since as early as 2008, Apple changed its position in October 2015 and will no longer acquiesce. This Note provides a detailed discussion of the underlying legal implications surrounding the so-called public standoff between Apple and the FBI, with particular attention to the propriety of the decryption assistance orders sought by the government under the All Writs Act. It further provides a detailed discussion of In re Order Requiring Apple, Inc. Assist in Execution of Search Warrant, an ongoing matter in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York, where Apple mounted its first opposition to a decryption assistance order under the All Writs Act. It further argues that the federal courts are authorized to compel third party assistance under the statute in certain situations, however, the statutes authority will eventually become obsolete as advancing technology will soon render such orders overly burdensome. It finally offers an expansion of the Communication Assistance to Law Enforcement Act (“CALEA”) as one potential solution to the threat that impenetrable device encryption poses to the functioning of the American criminal justice system.","PeriodicalId":80721,"journal":{"name":"Boston College law review. Boston College. 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引用次数: 2
摘要
类比很简单:想象一把撬不开也打不开的锁。一个保险箱,或者一个只有主人知道的唯一密码而没有物理入口的房子。绝对安全。这通常是苹果公司(Apple Inc.)最近在移动安全领域取得进展的理想,随着2014年iOS 8的推出,iphone默认接收全磁盘加密的数据范围大幅扩大。执法部门的结果是,数以百计的设备搜查令无法执行。随之而来的激烈的公众辩论,主要集中在这种新使用的加密技术所提供的不妥协的隐私的邪恶潜力上,随着政府机构继续努力通过《所有令状法》(All Writs Act)的命令获得联邦司法机构的援助,辩论愈演愈烈。尽管早在2008年,苹果就定期遵守指示该公司协助政府特工访问被锁定iphone的命令,但苹果在2015年10月改变了立场,不再默许。本文将详细讨论围绕苹果与FBI之间所谓公开对峙的潜在法律含义,并特别关注政府根据《所有令状法》(All Writs Act)寻求的解密协助命令的适当性。进一步对In re Order Requiring Apple, Inc.进行了详细的讨论。协助执行搜查令,这是美国纽约东区地方法院正在审理的案件,苹果公司在那里首次反对根据《所有令状法》(All Writs Act)发出的解密协助令。它进一步辩称,联邦法院有权在某些情况下根据法规强制第三方提供援助,然而,由于先进的技术将很快使这种命令变得过于繁重,因此法规的权力最终将变得过时。最后,它提出了扩大《执法通讯协助法》(CALEA)的范围,作为解决不可破解设备加密对美国刑事司法系统功能构成威胁的一种潜在解决方案。
A Second Bite at the Apple: Federal Courts' Authority to Compel Technical Assistance to Government Agents in Accessing Encrypted Smartphone Data, Under the All Writs Act
The analogy is simple: imagine an unpickable and unbreakable lock. A safe-deposit box, or a house with no physical way in other than a unique passcode known only to the owner. Absolute security. This was generally the ideal behind Apple, Inc.’s most recent stride in mobile security, which dramatically widened the breadth of data receiving full-disk encryption by default on iPhones with the introduction of iOS 8 in 2014. The result for law enforcement has been hundreds of device search warrants unable to be executed. The heated public debate that has followed, which has largely focused on the nefarious potential of the uncompromising privacy this newly utilized encryption provides, has intensified amidst continuing efforts by government agents to obtain aid from the federal judiciary by means of orders under the All Writs Act. Although Apple had regularly complied with such orders directing the company to assist government agents in accessing locked iPhones since as early as 2008, Apple changed its position in October 2015 and will no longer acquiesce. This Note provides a detailed discussion of the underlying legal implications surrounding the so-called public standoff between Apple and the FBI, with particular attention to the propriety of the decryption assistance orders sought by the government under the All Writs Act. It further provides a detailed discussion of In re Order Requiring Apple, Inc. Assist in Execution of Search Warrant, an ongoing matter in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York, where Apple mounted its first opposition to a decryption assistance order under the All Writs Act. It further argues that the federal courts are authorized to compel third party assistance under the statute in certain situations, however, the statutes authority will eventually become obsolete as advancing technology will soon render such orders overly burdensome. It finally offers an expansion of the Communication Assistance to Law Enforcement Act (“CALEA”) as one potential solution to the threat that impenetrable device encryption poses to the functioning of the American criminal justice system.