Protesters are preparing to assemble in more than 30 cities to lash out
at the
FBI for obtaining a court order that requires Apple to make it
easier to unlock an encrypted iPhone used by a gunman in December's mass
shootings in Southern California.
The protests organized by the
Internet rights group Fight for the Future are scheduled to occur
Tuesday outside Apple stores in the US, the U.K., Hong Kong and
Germany.
The US protests will be in cities scattered across more
than 20 states, including in New York, Chicago, San Francisco and
Washington, where protesters plan to express their discontent outside
the FBI's headquarters.
The gatherings will come a week after the
FBI went to court to force Apple to weaken the security built into most
iPhones to help a terrorism investigation in San Bernardino, California.
The FBI wants Apple to remove a feature that erases the information
stored on an iPhone after 10 unsuccessful attempts to enter a password,
preventing unauthorized users from accessing the device.
The iPhone that the FBI is trying to examine was used by Syed Farook, who along with his wife killed 14 people in December.
Apple
is fighting the court order issued in the case, arguing that the
special software sought by the FBI could be used to break into millions
of other iPhones. The FBI contends Apple is exaggerating the security
risks of complying with the court order in a marketing ploy aimed at
selling more iPhones.
(Also see: US Says Will Let Apple Keep Software to Help FBI Hack iPhone)
Fight for the Future believes Apple's
concerns are warranted and is hoping the protests will persuade the
Obama administration to take a stand against the way the FBI is trying
to break into Farook's iPhone, said Evan Greer, the group's campaign
director.
The White House so far has stood behind the FBI in its battle with Apple Inc.