Apple Helped Search for the Missing MH370 Plane
by
Jonathan Chew
@sochews
MARCH 2, 2016, 12:19 PM EST
FORTUNE.COM
The company said during a congressional hearing
In a congressional hearing for Apple and the FBI’s fight over accessing a locked iPhone, an interesting tidbit about the still-missing Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 came up.
Apple’s AAPL 0.22% general counsel Bruce Sewell was asked about a hypothetical: how would the company handle emergencies that involve accessing data in the phone?
The hypothetical situation put forth by Rep. Cedric Richmond, and first noted by The Verge, was if a terrorist placed information about a nuclear bomb into an iPhone and was suddenly killed. How long would it take Apple to build a piece of technology to find out more about the bomb?
“Within one hour of that plane being declared missing, we had Apple operators cooperating with telephone providers all over the world, with the airlines [and] with the FBI to try to find a ping, to try to find some way that we could locate where that plane was,” Sewell said at the hearing.
He said the first response would be to bring together all the emergency procedures at Apple’s disposal to try and find any information that could address immediate situations.
Sewell might have been implicitly suggesting that the company would work with existing agencies and technology as its way of helping, rather than actually creating new software, which the FBI is currently asking the company to do.
It was also the analysis of satellite pings to locate the missing MH370 plane was heavily used in determining the general location of the plane in the southern Indian Ocean. However, a piece of wreckage was found over the weekendon the coast of Mozambique, which is some ways away from the search area.