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Apple helped spooks build a spy-pod

by on20 August 2020


We thought it was supposed to be Huawei that did that

Apple helped the US government spooks build a "top secret" iPod with hidden sensors inside, a former employee has revealed.

Only four people at the company knew about the project, according to former Apple software engineer David Shayer.

Two men from a defence contractor had arrived at Apple in 2005, on behalf of the US Department of Energy, and wanted Jobs' Mob to build an iPod that looked and worked just like a normal one but secretly recorded data using hidden extra hardware inside.

Apple had helped the engineers build a custom version of the iPod software to accommodate the secret device, Shayer said.

"They were careful to make sure I never saw the hardware. And I never did."

He said the two engineers, from defence contractor Bechtel, had worked out of an office at Apple's buildings for months.

"They wanted to add some custom hardware to an iPod and record data from this custom hardware to the iPod's disk in a way that couldn't be easily detected. But it still had to look and work like a normal iPod."

The move was similar to what the CIA did with Cisco gear headed for China, and exactly the sort of thing that the US government claims, without proof, that Huawei does with its gear for the Chinese government.

Shayer said that this was wasn't a collaboration with Bechtel with a contract and payment. It was done under the table for the Department of Energy as a favour.

Shayer never found out exactly what the two engineers were building but suspected "something like a stealth Geiger counter" to measure radiation without being noticed.

The Department of Energy is, among other functions, responsible for nuclear power.

The story has been backed by other Apple employees of the time.

Tony Fadell, the former vice-president of the iPod division, tweeted the story was "absolutely spot on" and "real without a doubt".
Skip Twitter post by @tfadell

You should have seen the guys behind those 2 engineers… What a trip! I’m still friends with one of them today. Crazy super cool technology the government was working on then… I can only imagine what is cooking these days. https://t.co/ysZgmq1ldm
— Tony Fadell (@tfadell) August 18, 2020

 

Last modified on 20 August 2020
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