One of the biggest tech stories of 2016 surrounded the case of the San Bernardino shooter, in which the FBI sought Apple’s help to unlock the attacker’s iPhone by creating a backdoor into the company’s mobile OS last spring. And while the furore over that incident has died down since, we still haven’t reached a resolution as to whether we have the right to keep our digital secrets under any circumstances. The story that brings this debate back into focus concerns former Philadelphia police sergeant Francis Rawls, who was suspected of hoarding images of child sexual abuse on his computer…

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