The Apple vs FBI Battle That Redefined Digital Power in 2016

In early 2016, a locked smartphone became the center of a global confrontation. It sat silently on a government evidence table, powered off, sealed behind layers of encryption. Inside were potential clues to a terrorist attack. Outside stood two institutions that rarely collided so publicly—one responsible for national security, the other for consumer technology. The dispute that followed was not about a single device. It was about who should control the future of digital privacy. The clash between and the exposed a fault line that modern societies had not yet resolved: how much access should governments have to encrypted personal data, and at what cost. A Phone Locked by Design The conflict arose after the December 2015 terrorist attack in…
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