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I was about to say.
This is exactly what companies like Apple want you to believe - that they are as important as the government itself. Which, of course, is one of the most retarded notions you can have.
If Apple were to vanish right now, sure, it'd be problematic for a select number of people, but that's it. We'll survive, someone else will fill the void. Now imagine the government vanishing right now. It would lead to chaos, death, war, and god knows what else.
Claiming that an Apple employee losing a product prototype is akin to a military official losing highly sensitive defence data just shows how warped and stupid people have become.
Classified government data being leaked would be a threat to national security and could potentially be classed as treason. It would be a direct attack against the government and you would expect that government to use their agents to deal with the issue.
Stealing a cellphone from apple (assuming it was even explicitly stolen, rather than simply found) is no different than stealing a cellphone from a guy on the street - a crime which occurs every day. It happens so often that the police don't have enough time or resources to deal with it.
I had my phone stolen a few months ago, it was an iphone 3g and i could see from my mail server logs that it was still active. The police weren't interested and just gave me a crime number, the telco weren't interested either and just disabled the simcard. The police could have recovered my phone quite easily by tracking its location via cell tower triangulation, and doing so might have solved other crimes too (the thieves might have other stolen items in their possession)... But they weren't interested because an individual has no influence in this corporate dictatorship.





Member since:
2006-12-15
I agree, a crime was committed, my point was not that the police shouldn't be involved. My point was that a company like Apple can get a search warrant, a SWAT callout and a near immediate response over a damn cell phone. Have someone steal your phone and try to get the police to do more than file a report. It's unfair, imbalanced, and unfortunately the way the world works today. Anyone can see that.
What if I simply lost my USB keystick with classified government data on it (as seems to happen readily over in the UK). And Gizmodo bought it for $5000 and published all the contents. It is after all just a USB Keystick. They are a dime a dozen.
This was not simply a phone. That Gizmodo bought it for $5000 makes it abundantly clear that they knew it was not just any old phone...