Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Apple
  4. Mobile
  5. News

More rallies against the FBI planned outside Apple stores this week

Add as a preferred source on Google

Digital rights group Fight for the Future is continuing to organize rallies around the country to support Apple in its face-to-face with the FBI over encryption backdoors.

The next round of rallies will take place this Tuesday in more than 30 cities nationwide outside Apple stores. Last week the group staged its first protests in San Francisco. Fight for the Future opted for gathering outside Apple stores rather than FBI or government buildings in order to maximize visibility, according to Evan Greer, campaign director.

fftf
Fight for the Future
Fight for the Future
Recommended Videos

“People are rallying at Apple stores because what the FBI is demanding here will make all of us less safe, not more safe. Their unconstitutional attack on our digital security could put millions of people in danger, so we’re giving those people a way to get their voices heard,” Greer told Digital Trends.

The FBI wants Apple to install a software update on the phone of one of the San Bernardino shooters, Syed Rizwan Farook, as part of its investigation. This would effectively create a backdoor in the software that could be abused, said Apple CEO Tim Cook, who has stood firmly against the order from the authorities. Many technologists agree with Cook, including Berin Szoka, president of TechFreedom, a a nonprofit think tank.

“The FBI is trying to hit the ultimate reset button on privacy, turning the clock back to a time even before the Fourth Amendment’s warrant protections,” Szoka said.

Rallies are scheduled for Apple’s HQ in Silicon Valley as well as stores in large markets like San Francisco, Los Angeles, New York, and Chicago right down to smaller cities like Anchorage. Supporters are also gathering in Munich and Hong Kong.

Apple has garnered a lot of support from organizations committed to privacy and security and even rival companies like Google. But the company has been criticized by the families of the victims of the shooting, who are unhappy with Apple’s stance on the investigation. Stephen Larson, a former federal judge, is now representing the families in their legal action to support the FBI. “They were targeted by terrorists, and they need to know why, how this could happen,” said Larson.

His comments follow similar remarks made last week by the father of Lee Rigby, a U.K. soldier that was murdered by extremists. He accused Apple of “protecting a murderer’s privacy at the cost of public safety.”

Jonathan Keane
Jonathan is a freelance technology journalist living in Dublin, Ireland. He's previously written for publications and sites…
How to install iOS 27 public beta on your iPhone?
iOS 27’s public beta is here, and its loaded with new features and experiences you might want to try.
iOS 27 beta update open on iPhone

After iOS 27’s third developer beta shipped on July 6, Apple released the first public betas for iOS 27 on July 13, 2026. While the main additions remain the same across the builds, the latter is the more refined and polished version, free of rudimentary bugs and glitches.

If you have a compatible iPhone, you can install the first public beta of iOS 27 today and experience the new Siri AI and other features yourself, provided that you know exactly what to do.

Read more
This Android malware can spy on your screen, read your texts, and control your phone remotely
Upgraded RedHook Android malware now abuses Android's built-in Wireless ADB to hijack your phone without root access.
android-redhook-malware

A nastier version of the RedHook Android malware is making the rounds, and it does not need a USB cable or a rooted phone to take over your device. Researchers at Group-IB discovered the upgraded variant, which is a significant step up from the version spotted in 2025. The scariest part? It uses one of Android's own built-in tools to do it.

How RedHook malware tricks your Android phone into handing over control

Read more
iOS 27’s public beta is finally here, and you don’t need a developer account to get in
Siri's biggest comeback is finally leaving the lab.
iOS 27 new star rating feature in Photos

Greg Joswiak just made it official. A few minutes ago, Apple's marketing chief confirmed the availability of public betas for iOS 27, macOS 27, iPadOS 27, and other Apple devices.

If you've spent the last month watching developers gush over Siri AI, patiently waiting for the public beta, that wait is over.

Read more