Apple's Tim Cook demands that Bloomberg remove the story of the Chinese spy chip
Apple's Tim Cook demands that Bloomberg remove the story of the Chinese spy chip
Apple's CEO, Tim Cook, upped the ante in his denial of a research report that claimed that a Chinese spy chip was embedded in the technology giant's servers, and told BuzzFeed News that Bloomberg must retract the story: " This did not happen, there is no truth in this.
"I participated in our response to this story from the beginning," Cook said according to Buzzfeed. "Personally, I spoke with the Bloomberg reporters together with Bruce Sewell, who was our general advisor, it was very clear to them that this did not happen, and we answered all their questions ... Every time they told us, the story changed and each time that we investigate, we do not find anything. "
"There is no truth in his story about Apple," Cook added in the interview. "They need to do the right thing and remove it."
450 AMAZON EMPLOYEES PROTECT THE FACIAL RECOGNITION SOFTWARE THAT IS SOLD TO THE POLICE
Bloomberg issued a statement to Buzzfeed, saying it supports its reports, which included spending more than a year in the story and more than 100 interviews.
"Seventeen individual sources, including government officials and company informants, confirmed the manipulation of the hardware and other elements of the attacks," the spokesman told the news organization. "We also publish the full statements of three companies, as well as a statement from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of China, supporting our history and trusting our reports and sources."
Bloomberg Businessweek in its October history He alleged that the data center hardware used by Apple and Amazon Web Services, provided by the Super Micro server company, was under surveillance by the Chinese government.
Amazon denied that its hardware had been compromised, the Department of Homeland Security He said I had "no reason to doubt" Apple and Amazon negations of the report and Apple sent a letter to Congress saying that the report was without merit.
Apple issued before a long, severe answer on his company blog, saying in part:
"Apple has never found malicious chips on our servers." Finally, in response to questions we have received from other news organizations since Businessweek published its story, we do not have any gag or other confidentiality obligations.
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