Bill
Gates says U.S. needs limits on covert email searches
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[April 19, 2016]
By Dustin Volz and David Shepardson
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Bill Gates said on
Monday that no one was an “absolutist” on either side of the digital
privacy debate, but the co-founder of Microsoft Corp said he supports
his company’s lawsuit against the U.S. government seeking the freedom to
tell customers when federal agencies have sought their data.
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"There probably are some cases where (the government) should be able
to go in covertly and get information about a company’s email,"
Gates said at a Reuters Newsmaker event in Washington.
"But the position Microsoft is taking in this suit is that it should
be extraordinary and it shouldn’t be a matter of course that there
is a gag order automatically put in,” he said in an interview with
Reuters Editor-in-Chief Stephen Adler.
The lawsuit, filed last week in federal court in Microsoft's home
town of Seattle, argues that the government is violating the U.S.
Constitution by preventing Microsoft from notifying thousands of
customers about government requests for their emails and other
documents, sometimes indefinitely.
The move comes as rival Apple Inc is locked in a showdown with the
U.S. government over access to an iPhone belonging to one of the
killers in the December shooting in San Bernardino, California.
Gates said more collaboration between law enforcement and privacy
advocates would help determine which “legislative framework ...
strikes the perfect balance” on government access to private data.
“I don’t think there are any absolutists who think the government
should be able to get everything or the government should be able to
get nothing,” Gates, 60, said.
The man who co-founded Microsoft in 1975 and is still held in
reverence by the technology world made waves in February when he
appeared to distance himself from Apple in its legal fight with the
U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation, but later clarified his
comments and said that headlines suggesting he supported the FBI’s
position were inaccurate.
Gates, the world's richest person, also talked about the work of the
Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, the philanthropic organization he
formed in 2000, which has an endowment of more than $40 billion.
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The foundation, where Gates works day to day, has focused attention
in recent months on the Zika outbreak, which has been linked to
thousands of suspected cases of microcephaly, a rare birth defect,
in Brazil and is affecting large parts of Latin America and the
Caribbean.
The World Health Organization declared the outbreak an international
health emergency on Feb. 1. Gates said the foundation would be
contributing funds to aid in the Zika fight, but did not say how
much.
Private sector and governments need to work together to quickly roll
out products to combat Zika and other mosquito-borne diseases, Gates
said.
"Zika is a tough one," he said. "There are potential solutions. They
won't come soon enough to avoid some problems in the entire
hemisphere."
(Reporting by Dustin Volz and David Shepardson in Washington;
Editing by Bill Rigby)
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