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Cook Remains Coy About Apple Car Plans

Apple CEO Tim Cook told ABC News in a recent interview that the software will cause cancer to the company.

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Most investors might cringe at the idea of their firm going to war with the USA government.

Added the reverend Jesse Jackson, an Apple stock owner for 15 years: “Where we stand in controversy is a measure of our character”. The announcement came as the Cupertino company held its annual shareholders meeting Friday.

“You’re a man of integrity and character”, Jackson said to Cook, before comparing Apple’s opposition to “unprecedented government overreach” to the fights waged by civil rights and labor leaders Martin Luther King Jr. and Cesar Chavez.

New Delhi, Feb.28: Technology giant Apple Inc has argued that a move to break into the iPhone of one of the San Bernardino shooter would violate free speech rights, override the will of Congress and jeopardise the security of other Apple devices. He said that “once we start spending gobs of money-like when we start spending on tooling and things like that-we’re committed”. “Being hard doesn’t scare us”. Apple has big hopes for India, was Cook’s message. Lee Tien, a privacy lawyer with the Electronic Frontier Foundation, agrees that Cook himself doesn’t appear to be at risk, but that, in the event that Apple were charged with contempt, it could be subject to stiff fines. “Well, it’s going to be Christmas Eve for a while”, as per reports from Business Insider.

“We gave everything that we had”, he told Muir today. “We can not go down this path again”. It’s Apple’s “Project Titan”, the mysterious automotive project that has analysts and tech fans buzzing about a production electric auto from the company that brought you the iPhone.

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In a message to customers last week, Cook said that Apple had helped the Federal Bureau of Investigation, but would not create a so-called backdoor that would have the potential to unlock any iPhone, not just the one that belonged to Farook.

Apple CEO Tim Cook remains evasive on car project