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(11 Mar 2016) RESTRICTION SUMMARY: AP CLIENTS ONLY POOL - AP CLIENTS ONLY Austin, Texas - 11 March 2016 1. US President Barack Obama walks onto stage 2. SOUNDBITE (English) Barack Obama, US President: "We take enormous pride in the fact that we are the world's oldest continuous democracy, and yet we systematically put up barriers and make it as hard as possible for our citizens to vote." 3. Cutaway 4. SOUNDBITE (English) Barack Obama, US President: "I think it's important for a group like this, as we come up to an election, regardless of your party affiliation, to think about how do we redesign our systems so that we don't have 50 percent or 55 percent voter participation on presidential elections, and during off-year congressional elections, you got 39 or 40 percent voting." 5. Wide of moderator and Obama, UPSOUND (English) No name provided, moderator: "Somehow online voter registration is perceived to be insecure. Or same-day registration." Obama: "It's not insecure, it's done because the folks who are currently governing the good state of Texas ++laughter++ aren't interested in having more people participate." ++cheers++ 6. Cutaway 7. SOUNDBITE (English) Barack Obama, US President (responding to question about FBI vs Apple): "We recognise that just like all of our other rights, freedom of speech, freedom of religion, etcetera, that there are going to be some constraints that we impose in order to make sure that we are safe, secure and living in a civilised society." 8. Cutaway 9. SOUNDBITE (English) Barack Obama, US President (on FBI and Apple): "Technology is evolving so rapidly that new questions are being asked, and I am of the view that there are very real reasons why we want to make sure that government cannot just willy nilly get into everybody's iPhones that is full of - or smart phones - that are full of very personal information and very personal data. And let's face it: the whole Snowden (referring to former NSA contractor Edward Snowden) disclosure episode elevated people's suspicions of this." 10. Cutaway 11. SOUNDBITE (English) Barack Obama, US President (on FBI and Apple): "I am way on the civil liberties side of this thing. You know, Bill McRaven (Chancellor of the University of Texas System) will tell you that I anguish a lot over the decisions we make in terms of how to keep this country safe and I am not interested in overthrowing the values that have made us an exceptional and great nation simply for expediency. But the dangers are real. Maintaining law and order and a civilised society is important. Protecting our kids is important. And so I would just caution against taking an absolutist perspective on this." 12. Obama walks off stage STORYLINE: US President Barack Obama said on Friday the encryption versus national security debate won't be settled by taking an "absolutist view" of the situation. Speaking at a question-and-answer session at the South by Southwest Interactive festival in Austin, Texas, Obama said both values are important. But he asked how the government would catch child pornographers or disrupt extremist plots if devices are made so that law enforcement cannot access the data stored on them. Obama says he's "way on the civil liberties side" but adds that concessions must be made at times. Apple and the federal government are embroiled in a legal fight over Apple's refusal to help the FBI access an iPhone used in the San Bernardino attack. =========================================================== Clients are reminded: Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork Twitter: / ap_archive Facebook: / aparchives Instagram: / apnews You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/you...