Apple presentation on how to handle leaks gets leaked
The Outline recently obtained an hour-long audio recording from an internal briefing at Apple titled “Stopping Leakers - Keeping Confidential at Apple.” The presentation, held for about 100 people, was lead by three members of Apple’s Global Security division: director of global security David Rice, director of worldwide investigations Lee Freedman, and Jenny Hubbert, from the Global Security communications and training team.
As detailed by The Outline,
the audio describes the lengths Apple goes to in order to keep
information about new products out of the hands of leakers, competitors,
and the press. The Global Security team tasked with this includes
previous members from the NSA, the US military, the FBI, and the US
Secret Service.
Rice speaks about the various ways workers try to steal
parts, including flushing them down a toilet to collect later in a sewer
and throwing them over fences. In one of the more outlandish schemes,
Rice says, “We had 8,000 enclosures stolen a long time ago by women
putting it in the underwire of their bra.”
The workers are tempted by payments that can exceed what
they make in several months. Rice says they’ve seen cases where up to a
year’s salary has been offered in reward for stealing parts. According
to a 2016 report from China Labor Watch, Apple workers on the production line make about $350 USD a month.
The most valuable thing to steal is usually the device’s
housing or enclosure, which often ends up in Shenzhen’s electronics
market. Rice says in 2013 Apple had to buy back 29,000 total enclosures
ahead of the iPhone 5C announcement in order to “keep it out of every
blog on Earth.”
These are now severe exceptions, according to Rice,
something he notes as an exceptional accomplishment given the company
screens upwards of 3 million people a day coming in and out of their
overseas factories. In 2016, Rice says Apple produced 65 million
housings, with only four stolen: a one in 16 million loss ratio.
According to The Outline report,
the overseas leaks have been handled so successfully that now Apple is
turning the focus on their own campuses in California. “Last year was
the first year that Apple [campuses] leaked more than the supply chain,”
Rice says in the audio. “More stuff came out of Apple [campuses] last
year than all of our supply chain combined.”
Two US leakers mentioned include one who worked at
Apple’s online store, and another who worked on iTunes. Both were
providing information to blogs, and though their motivations were not
mentioned, Rice says of US leakers, “We oftentimes get people who are
really excited about our products and they end up finding something to
share and they will go out and say, ‘Hey, guess what we did.' Or
somebody will ask them a question and instead of just saying, ‘I can't
talk about it,’ they will say too much.”
Though Apple’s Global Security team says it has been able
to slow the occurrence of leaks, they still happen. In April, an
unverified schematic of the iPhone 8 leaked, and this month, leaks were provided by three alleged Foxconn employees ahead of WWDC with details on products like the HomePod.
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