DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

This tech traitor has blood on his hands after rolling over for Trump

July 18, 2026
in News
This tech traitor has blood on his hands after rolling over for Trump

When Tim Cook steps down as CEO of Apple on September 1, he will be leaving behind a company enjoying record-breaking profits. In just the second quarter alone, Apple reportedly earned over $100 billion. Financially, the company couldn’t be any stronger. Ethically, it couldn’t be in any more peril.

Since Donald Trump returned to office, his masked goon squad—aka ICE—has killed 10 people. Fifty, if you include the roughly 40 who reportedly died while in custody. And that’s not counting the tens of thousands who have allegedly been injured, brutalized, or wrongfully detained at the hands of these poorly trained, poorly screened, and increasingly lawless agents.

To date, not a single ICE agent has been held personally accountable for their actions.

While it’s impossible to know how many lives might have been saved had Cook not bowed to pressure from the Trump Justice Department and removed IceBlock, the app that gives communities advance warning of ICE activity, allowing people to avoid potentially dangerous encounters, one can’t help but wonder how many of those tragedies might have been prevented had Cook stood his ground.

IceBlock operates on essentially the same principle as Waze—and even Apple Maps—which alert motorists to police activity and speed traps ahead. Yet, Waze is still available on the App Store.

By eliminating one of the few tools communities could use to warn one another of potentially dangerous encounters, Apple sided with a government that had already demonstrated its willingness to use executive power to achieve what it could not accomplish in a court of law. We’d already seen those strong-arm tactics succeed against major law firms and universities that chose capitulation over litigation. Apple simply became just another institution to fold.

What makes Cook’s decision particularly striking is that it represents a complete reversal of the principles he, himself, once defended.

In 2016, Cook refused repeated demands from the FBI to build a backdoor into the iPhone used by one of the San Bernardino shooters, arguing that weakening encryption for one case would endanger the privacy and security of millions. He rightly stood on principle, even in the face of enormous political pressure.

ICEBlock developer Joshua Aaron has said in numerous interviews that one of the primary reasons he never released the app for Android was Google’s inability to protect user data to the same degree as Apple. Apple, he believed, was “100% safe.”

Or, so he thought.

All it took for Apple to eviscerate that promise was a five-minute phone call to its CEO. No lawsuits. No subpoenas. No prolonged legal battle. Just a phone call.

By agreeing to remove ICEBlock, without so much as an ounce of pushback, Tim Cook betrayed not only Steve Jobs’ vision of technology empowering ordinary people, but his own.

At the time, Apple tried to justify the decision by citing safety concerns—that someone could theoretically use the app to locate ICE agents and commit violence. Yet the company has yet to explain why that rationale applies to ICEBlock but not to Waze or Apple Maps, both of which notify users of police activity in remarkably similar ways.

The precedent this sets for Big Tech—and what it means for the everyday user—should keep all of us awake at night. If the companies entrusted with the most intimate details of our lives are willing to fold at the slightest hint of political pressure, then none of us can be certain our privacy is protected, no matter what their policies promise.

Good luck putting that horse back in the barn.

The post This tech traitor has blood on his hands after rolling over for Trump appeared first on Raw Story.

Iran says it is suspending commitments to interim deal with U.S. as they exchange attacks
News

Iran says it is suspending commitments to interim deal with U.S. as they exchange attacks

by Los Angeles Times
July 18, 2026

DUBAI — The United States and Iran exchanged strikes aimed at infrastructure and military targets on Saturday as an Iranian negotiator said ...

Read more
News

Tom Segura’s estranged wife, Christina Pazsitzky, breaks silence on their ‘really difficult’ split

July 18, 2026
News

‘Foolish provocateurs’: critic revels as Elon Musk and Trump Jr. flail in ‘losing fight’

July 18, 2026
News

US renews warning against travel to Middle East after Iranian terror group targets Saudi Arabia

July 18, 2026
News

I’ve lived in one of New England’s most popular tourist destinations for over 20 years. It’s certainly not for everyone.

July 18, 2026
It’s time to dump time zones

It’s time to dump time zones

July 18, 2026
Trump’s Reflecting Pool vandalism claim gets legal check: ‘Rushed and poorly conceived’

Trump’s Reflecting Pool vandalism claim gets legal check: ‘Rushed and poorly conceived’

July 18, 2026
Desalination plants, a vital source of Mideast drinking water, come under attack as renewed U.S.-Iran war escalates to target infrastructure

Desalination plants, a vital source of Mideast drinking water, come under attack as renewed U.S.-Iran war escalates to target infrastructure

July 18, 2026

DNYUZ © 2026

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2026