Apple’s Tim Cook paid $102m this year including bonuses worth $98m

Apple’s Tim Cook paid $102m this year including bonuses worth $98m

Apple’s chief executive, Tim Cook, was paid $102m (£76m) this year after collecting a huge share bonus linked to the iPhone maker’s stock market performance.

Cook was paid a basic salary of $3.06m, a cash bonus of $9.3m (up from $5.4m last year), and collected share awards worth $89m taking his total 2017 payout to $102m, Apple disclosed in a regulatory filing.

Källa: Apple’s Tim Cook paid $102m this year including bonuses worth $98m

Apple’s Tim Cook paid $102m this year including bonuses worth $98m

FCC approves first wireless ’power-at-a-distance’ charging system

Charging your mobile device wirelessly is certainly less of a hassle than plugging it in, but still requires the device be in physical contact with its station to actually work. That’s about to change now that the Federal Communications Commission has approved the first wireless charger that works from up to three feet away.

Källa: FCC approves first wireless ’power-at-a-distance’ charging system

Apple’s legal encryption responsibiltiies

Apple’s legal encryption responsibiltiies

 

Matthew Green at Lawfare has an interesting analysis of Apple’s responsibilities (or lack thereof) to the government in terms of letting law enforcement access secure communications:

Apple does not provide the encryption keys for iMessage, thus there is no current legal obligation for Apple to redesign the system to provide law enforcement access. In fact, it’s exactly these explicit limitations of CALEA that apparently have been driving law enforcement to push for new legislation (whoch has in the past been referred to as “CALEA II”). That effort has not yet born fruit, despite a number of high-profile speeches.

Källa: Apple’s legal encryption responsibiltiies