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Original poster
Apr 12, 2001
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Apple, and Tim Cook personally, have been sued by a conservative activist and three others as part of a class action lawsuit [PDF] over alleged privacy violations resulting from the company's supposed participation in the NSA's PRISM intelligence program.

The plaintiffs have also sued President Obama, Attorney General Eric Holder, NSA Director Keith Alexander, the NSA itself, the U.S. Department of Justice, as well as Facebook, Google, YouTube, Microsoft, Skype, AOL, Yahoo, PalTalk, AT&T and Sprint -- and all the CEO's of those companies personally.

As one of the largest companies in the world, Apple is routinely sued over a wide variety of issues. The company has a large legal teams to handle these lawsuits, though the sheer number of defendants in this case could make for interesting court filings.

Plaintiff Larry Klayman issued this statement:
This and the Verizon class action will serve to unify all political and social persuasions in our great nation to wage a second American revolution, one that is peaceful and legal - but pursued with great resolve and force. Government dishonesty and tyranny against the people have reached historic proportions during the last three administrations in particular, and the time has come for We the People to rise up and reclaim control of our nation. If not, the government will control us and this will mark the end of individual liberties. The American people can thus use these class actions to 'man the barricades of freedom' against the establishment government despots and their corporate enablers who seek to enslave them through coercive abuses of their privacy. This Orwellian power grab can only be intended to blackmail the masses into submission in order that these modern day greedy tyrants achieve their corrupt ends.
This isn't the only class action lawsuit filed or planned over the PRISM disclosures. Senator Rand Paul (R-KY) has said he will file a lawsuit against the Obama administration over what he says are "unconstitutional" surveillance programs. Paul wants to get the customers of all the offending companies to join a class action suit and take it to the U.S. Supreme Court.

The American Civil Liberties Union has also filed a lawsuit, though it is focusing on the Government itself rather than the alleged corporate partners. The suit alleges that the Government's tracking of phone records violates Section 215 of the Patriot Act.

It's important to note that both Rand Paul and the ACLU are, at least to this point, primarily speaking out about Verizon Business Network Services giving call logs to the NSA for millions of calls both within the United States and abroad. However, both the Verizon/NSA issue and the Apple-related PRISM allegations were revealed on the same day last week and are largely seen as connected in the eyes of most critics.

Note: Due to the political nature of the discussion regarding this topic, the comment thread is located in our Politics, Religion, Social Issues forum. All MacRumors forum members and site visitors are welcome to read and follow the thread, but posting is limited to forum members with at least 100 posts.

Article Link: Apple, Tim Cook and Others Sued Over Alleged NSA/PRISM Privacy Violations
 

xVeinx

macrumors 6502
Oct 9, 2006
361
0
California
If you want to change policy, you sue the government. If you want cash, you sue Apple. Unless I'm mistaken, the other companies have no choice but to comply with federal law.
 

japanime

macrumors 68030
Feb 27, 2006
2,916
4,844
Japan
If you want to change policy, you sue the government. If you want cash, you sue Apple...

Well, then, this lawsuit has all its bases covered — as it is directed at both the government and the wealthy corporations.
 

IlluminatedSage

macrumors 68000
Aug 1, 2000
1,563
339
Any company which willingly goes along with terrible gov't regulations to build in gaping wide backdoors to everything in the servers, cell phones, devices, that can activate cams, microphones and track GPS by the second deserves to be sued and lose their consumer confidence.

I am happy there are people suing every company involved and the gov't.

For a company to go along with unconstitutional laws, or in some cases FCC regulations, without fighting them, they ought to get hit hard for selling their customers out.
 

gnasher729

Suspended
Nov 25, 2005
17,980
5,565
We need to get Tim Cook out of Apple. He's just causing more and more lawsuits.

Can we first get rid of the CEOs of Facebook, Google, YouTube, Microsoft, Skype, AOL, Yahoo, PalTalk, AT&T and Sprint? Plus the US president, and a few others?

You probably didn't notice that Apple has already taken action - in the future, Google will not be asked about any Siri requests anymore, but Microsoft's Bing will be used instead; that should be a significant reduction of privacy risks.
 

Vol7ron

macrumors 6502
Jun 11, 2009
281
189
Derry, NH
Solution to life's problems...sue. Sue early, sue often...


Now I am not dismissing nor agreeing with everything that has transpired in the recent week, but what good is suing going to do? Tim Cook isn't going to lose his house, or be thrown in jail, etc....Apple isn't going to be dissolved, or burdened by this, etc... All that will happen is just lawyers getting money, that is all...and people feeling good that "something" was done about it...
 

Tiger8

macrumors 68020
May 23, 2011
2,479
649
3 seconds of fame

I am a small-time lawyer who want my 3 seconds of fame, let me sue Tim Cook
 

alent1234

macrumors 603
Jun 19, 2009
5,688
170
Any company which willingly goes along with terrible gov't regulations to build in gaping wide backdoors to everything in the servers, cell phones, devices, that can activate cams, microphones and track GPS by the second deserves to be sued and lose their consumer confidence.

I am happy there are people suing every company involved and the gov't.

For a company to go along with unconstitutional laws, or in some cases FCC regulations, without fighting them, they ought to get hit hard for selling their customers out.


to be sued, you have to break a law
which law was broken? not like the NSA did this on their own. where did they get the money?
 

ValSalva

macrumors 68040
Jun 26, 2009
3,783
259
Burpelson AFB
All the facts are not in yet. Maybe this is an attempt at shining the light of day on the facts. Good luck with that. I have a feeling this suit will die a quiet death at the hands of higher government powers.
 

surf2snow1

macrumors regular
Feb 26, 2008
173
75
Does anyone else see a little bit of "V for Vendetta" in the statement made by the plaintiffs?

...and the time has come for We the People to rise up and reclaim control of our nation....
 

bdkennedy1

Suspended
Oct 24, 2002
1,275
528
I'm not sure these companies were actually aware of how this information is obtained. 4 years ago I saw a documentary on cable (can't remember what station, History Channel? Discovery Channel?) about a government program that taps the fiber lines coming into and out of the country. All data is fed through a government computer and is filtered including phone calls. The filter uses key words to narrow down its search. The computer has voice recognition where it takes wavelengths from phone calls and matches the voice to a database.

Needless to say I can't find any information about it anymore.
 
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