Russian Lawmaker Wants Proof US Will Not Store iPhone Prints

2013/09/23

MOSCOW, September 23 (RIA Novosti) – St. Petersburg lawmaker Vitaly Milonov cautioned Russian officials Monday against using Apple’s new iPhone until there is proof that the advanced technology is safe from US spying.


Milonov said he planned to ask Russia’s Federal Agency of Government Communications and Information (FAPSI) – the obsolete equivalent of the US National Security Agency, responsible for communications security and signals intelligence – to find out if there is a guarantee that “the [iPhone] 5S fingerprints will not appear in the US special services database.”


“If it turns out that there is no guarantee against the theft of fingerprints, then the use of the 5S could be restricted for state officials at work,” Milonov, with whom the idea for Russia’s controversial anti-gay law originated, wrote on Twitter.


Apple's new iPhone allows users to register their fingerprints on their device as a security measure to enable them to unlock it. The US tech giant said earlier this month that “information about the fingerprint is stored on the device and not uploaded to company networks – meaning it wouldn’t be in data batches that may be sent to or collected by US intelligence agencies under court orders,” according to Bloomberg.


A group of German hackers claimed to have found a way to dupe the iPhone fingerprint scanner on Sunday, just two days after the new technology was unveiled. The hackers said that fake fingerprints can be made with “materials that can be found in almost every household.”


FAPSI was in fact abolished in 2003, and its functions divided among other bodies, including the FSB.



© RIA Novosti.





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