In China, Japan and South Korea, Samsung will sell slightly different versions of its Galaxy S7 and Galaxy S7 edge, without its own logo on the front.
Flexible components may be employed to make the device more durable or enable new control gestures.
Anti-virus pioneer and presidential candidate John McAfee says the FBI could unlock an iPhone in half an hour.
Apple and the FBI will make their cases before Congress on Tuesday as the debate over access to a terrorist's iPhone continues.
A federal judge said a 1789 law cannot be used to force Apple to unlock the iPhone of a suspected drug trafficker.
Bruce Sewell, Apple general counsel, will tell House Judiciary Committee the case could set dangerous precedent.
In Apple Inc.’s battle with the FBI over whether to unlock a terrorist’s phone, product sales are unlikely to suffer, even should the company lose in the courts.
Apple reintroduced a regular cash dividend in 2012 after not paying one since 1995. Last year’s was $1.98 per share, amounting to $11.4 billion.
Tim Cook made the comments Friday at a company shareholder meeting, where he described the encryption standoff as a test of principles.
The South Korean phone manufacturer didn't violate Apple patents and won't have to pay it $119.6 million, an appeals court ruled Friday.
Covertly breaking the code wouldn’t set the legal precedent the FBI wants, cybersecurity experts say.
Apple CEO Tim Cook and others warn that granting the government access to customers' iPhone data would violate First Amendment rights — and lead to more requests.
Improved encryption would frustrate U.S. investigators who are facing problems obtaining data from Apple’s servers related to the San Bernardino case.
Meanwhile, in an interview with ABC News, Tim Cook said fighting against entry into people's smartphones was the right thing to do.
Apple's latest mobile OS also lags behind iOS 7, which held 80 percent share on Apple's devices in the same period of 2014.
The company spent nearly $5 million on lobbying Capitol Hill in 2015.
The CEO of Cyanogen believes manufacturers have only scratched the surface of smartphone potential.
The founder of Microsoft said Congress ultimately needs to weigh in on whether the FBI can compel Apple to unlock the San Bernardino shooter’s iPhone.
"I just think it is not the right to thing to unplug [encryption] from the mainstream products that people use,” Mark Zuckerberg said.
The CEO also said that Apple was not committed to an idea until it was spending money on tooling.
Although the FBI maintains that its order is narrowly tailored, Apple argues it would set a “dangerous precedent” for the future.
The company refuses to create software to unlock an iPhone use by San Bernardino Shooter Syed Rizwan Farook.