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Mac OS Ken

Mac OS Ken: 01.13.2015

Mac OS Ken

Ken Ray

Technology

4.7995 Ratings

🗓️ 13 January 2015

⏱️ 22 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

- British PM Pushes for Greater Access to Encrypted Communications in Wake of Paris Violence - JMP Analyst Deems Apple the Big Winner of CES - Cantor Fitzgerald Analyst Sees TVs and Robots in Apple Future - UBS Analysts Sees HealthKit as Differentiator for Apple - Spotify Tops 15-Million Paid Subscribers; 60-Million Active Listeners - A Look at Mobility and Engagement on Spotify - French Streamer Deezer Buys Cricket Partner Muve Music - Reports: iPod shuffle Supply Drying Up - Signs of iOS 9 in Traffic Logs of Tech Sites - Xiaomi Warns Buying Public Against Copycat Xiaomi Devices - Smuggler Caught Wearing 94 iPhones - SaneBox: Bring Sanity to Your Inbox with a 2-Week Free Trial at

Transcript

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0:00.0

This is Mac OSK.

0:11.0

Mac OSK. Kim.

0:12.0

The UK wants into your iPhone two tales of CES and waiting for the beats to kick in.

0:21.0

It's Tuesday, January 13, 2015. I'm Kan Ray and this is news from MacoS. Can,

0:28.4

brought to you by yours truly and supported by IChard magazine, putting Apple and Tech News in focus, EYE,

0:37.7

E.Chart magazine, available for iOS Newsstand now. Fear-mongering is alive and well and headed for your iPhone.

0:47.4

And yes that's sort of a fear-mongering statement. Sort of. In the wake of last week's violence in Paris, including the

0:56.2

terrorist attacks on the offices of satirical newspaper Charlie Edboo, British

1:01.0

Prime Minister David Cameron is calling for the ban of

1:04.2

encrypted communications if government agencies can't hold the keys.

1:08.9

Enacted that would make such apps as Snapchat,

1:11.9

what's-app and Apple's eye message illegal.

1:16.4

Business Insider had Cameron speaking Monday asking whether we want to allow a means of communication

1:21.2

between two people which even with a signed warrant from the

1:24.2

home secretary personally that we cannot read. You get a 50-50 shot at his

1:29.8

answer. Wanna guess? My answer to that question is no, he continued, we must not. The first duty of any

1:37.0

government is to keep our country and our people safe. The New York Times says Cameron's comments are part of a run-up to a general election in May.

1:47.0

Should his party win, Cameron says he'll introduce new legislation that would apparently either give government access to communications or make modes of

1:54.9

communication to which government does not have access illegal. The piece

2:00.0

says any action taken would not go into effect until sometime in 2016 at the earliest.

2:06.0

There's no guarantee that Cameron's party will win in the general election this year.

2:10.1

There's no guarantee that the types of changes he's suggesting will come to pass if he does when,

...

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