> Apple has repeatedly refused to allow law enforcement to access criminals’ devices
Creating a backdoor for government device access enables turnkey oppression against individuals and marginalized groups, from enemies both foreign and domestic. I can see why this rhetoric would be mildly convincing to a senator, but as for me I want my device to be as protected as the contents of my brain.
> Google abandoned a contract to deliver the Pentagon drone AI technology
I absolutely do not want AI in drones, I barely even want drones to exist at all. The US is flying these around the world attempting to dispassionately assassinate people, and they often get it wrong. AI, best case, just makes this more palatable than it already is.
> Microsoft has maintained “strategic partner” status with a Chinese drone and imaging technology firm
Oh really? I thought we liked AI in drones.
> Facebook enables and profits from the harassment of victims of horrific shootings and other violent crimes
This absolutely sucks, but like what do you expect them to do? Is this an argument that FB can’t handle moderation at scale, or are they realistically expected by the author to prevent all harassment (or just this specific arbitrary type)?
I want the US to have good drone technology. I do not want China to.
No offense but that's not really relevant to the question at hand. The article debates whether the American tech sector is conducive to American national security, not whether your phone is sufficiently libertarian.
the points raised are perfectly valid. The tech sector is out of alignment with law enforcement, out of alignment with the American military sector, potentially more in alignment with foreign governments, and social media companies may be destabilizing society at a cultural level.
So in short the American tech sector is a competing power center that sidelines the interests of the state and the nation. Funnily enough China which is mentioned multiple times ,despite popular perception in the US, actually does have the same problem. Which is why they did exactly what the article demanded, which is pursue anti-trust measures and bring the hammer down on big tech.
> The tech sector is out of alignment with law enforcement
In this particular case, I'd say that's a good thing. Law enforcement, and certain three letter agencies, have a terrible track record here. If big tech is making it a little harder for them to bypass basic privacy rights, I'm ok with that.
A backdoor that can be used by law enforcement is one that can potentially (probably) be misused by law enforcement, privileged parties, foreign governments, parties with leverage over the implementer or intermediate agents, plain old hackers, etc. My concern is unauthorized, inappropriate, or overzealous use of a backdoor by any one of these, which I believe to be a threat to national security.
Perhaps some random citizen being compromised isn’t necessarily a national security threat, but large groups being compromised or particular key individuals (industrial leaders, government officials, etc) certainly could be. I agree this sidelines law enforcement to some extent, but then again by design so do many rights US citizens possess. Thus my explicit use of “foreign and domestic”.
An intern at a lobbying group was tasked with writing a hit piece to circulate amongst LAs, and here it is. Maybe they should have stuck with the points about colluding with the Chinese government.
"Apple doesn't help law enforcement unlock phones of suspected criminals"
...what?
I feel like you're onto something here but I need that acronym's meaning :)
Left or Right, most of them believe that defying the national security apparatus is adjacent to treason.
This is true regardless of how I feel about "Big Tech Monopolies". And I don't really know how to feel. I don't work at one, I don't particularly like or dislike them. I vaguely dislike Mark Zuckerberg - there's all my bias out in the open.
Based on my bias, I should be sympathetic to this article. But I just find it annoying. You don't get my support by making vaguely hostile grunts while gesticulating at Facebook. You don't get it by reciting a laundry list of bad things your selected corporate targets have done or seemed to have done (what about, say, Exxon Mobil?).
Something about this article just screams bad faith and ulterior motives. I think it's the general hostile mood toward "Big Tech Monopolies" combined with a lack of any logic or motivation for that hostility. Like, 99% of the stuff they're complaining about has nothing to do with monopoly behavior. They're just throwing spaghetti at the wall and seeing what sticks.
Who wants to bet that "American Economic Liberties Project" is just a front for some other type of vampire squid wrapped around the face of humanity? One of those "Patriotic Americans For Truth And The Children" type organizations that's really just a coalition of a few obscenely rich entities that want a particular policy enacted to harm their enemies?
It's a name of which Orwell would be proud. The site hosts article after article advocating ending economic liberties.
Consider that you might be focusing on the tech companies just because they are highly visible. If the goal is to determine what endangers American security, a consideration of where power is really concentrated would be worthwhile.
That doesn't mean I approve of everything they do. That doesn't mean I can't or won't decry their putting thumbs on scales toward a certain type of bien-pensant ideology. That does mean that, overall, I am very, very glad that they are American instead of Russian, Chinese, or even British, French, or German.
Ever since the Microsoft anti-trust trial, I've been very suspicious of think-tank and "industry" groups, on any side of these kinds of issues. Wikipedia says "The AELP is funded in part by the Omidyar Network." I'm not sure what that means.
"In 2020, Apple was lobbying on behalf of forced labor in China, attempting to weaken the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act. In 2021, 7 Apple suppliers in China were found to have participated in labor programs suspected of using Uyghur forced labor, including Lens Technology, one of Apple’s longest-running and highest-profile suppliers – which also supplies Amazon and Tesla."