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Tim Cook talks privacy and security at Utah's 2021 Silicon Slopes summit

What you need to know

  • Tim Cook attended a fireside chat at Utah's Silicon Slopes summit.
  • The Apple CEO talked about the company's views on privacy and security.

Tim Cook is making the rounds.

Tim Cook is back to talking privacy and security, but this time it's actually in person.

As reported by the Deseret News, the Apple CEO sat down for a fireside chat with United States Senator Mike Lee at Utah's 2021 Silicon Slopes Summit. During the chat, Cook said that the people he saw at the event are the ones who "want to change the world."

"What I look for when I go places is people who want to change the world. Technology should serve humanity and not the other way around. And that's what I see here."

When Lee asked Cook about Apple's stance on privacy and security, the CEO echoed other executives and said that they view privacy "as a human right."

"We view privacy as a fundamental human right. What we see is that your phone has more information on you than if someone went through your house and opened every door and closet and everything in your home. Your phone has your history, your financial information, your health information, your close contacts, who you call.

The only person that has the key to your (Apple) phone is you and we think that's the way it should be."

Cook went on to push back against ideas of a back door designed for law enforcement, saying that it was impossible to prevent others from accessing it as well:

"People say do it (program a device backdoor) just for this government agency, but it's not possible from an engineering standpoint," Cook said. "You can't create a backdoor that's just for the good guys."

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