UK drops demand for backdoor into Apple encryption

(theverge.com)

276 pontos | por iamdamian 240 dias atrás

26 comentários

  • hermannj314
    240 dias atrás
    As a believer in equal protection under the law, it is never a win when a powerful company or government lobbies for a specific carve out for only it's customers or its country. Human rights like privacy don't belong to those who bought the right phone or were born on the right piece of soil.

    This isn't a win, this is solidifying and reinforcing the idea that different laws should exist for different classes of people - those who can afford to make the government look the other way and those that can't.

    Congratulations to Apple on lobbying for its own money. Very noble.

    • throwfaraway4
      240 dias atrás
      >it is never a win when a powerful company or government lobbies for a specific carve out for only it's customers or its country.

      This wasn't an "Apple only" law -- it would have affected all platforms with data on customers that live outside the UK.

      >This isn't a win, this is solidifying and reinforcing the idea that different laws should exist for different classes of people - those who can afford to make the government look the other way and those that can't.

      Corporations are not people. The people can afford to vote out politicians making laws that go against the will of the people.

      • bendigedig
        240 dias atrás
        > This wasn't an "Apple only" law -- it would have affected all platforms with data on customers that live outside the UK.

        Yeah, the law still exists. Apple just successfully managed to refuse to comply with a request made under it.

    • chrismustcode
      240 dias atrás
      I agree it should be across the spectrum where people have the same rights to privacy.

      > those who can afford to make the government look the other way and those that can't.

      > Congratulations to Apple on lobbying for its own money. Very noble.

      But what’s your implication here, that Apple shouldn’t have fought it?

      • consp
        240 dias atrás
        Probably that it should be a generalization and apple should have fought for that and not apply just to one particular operator.
      • hermannj314
        240 dias atrás
        As far as I know, the blue/green mentality is a cultural issue for Apple. They would be fine if Android users had their data read by the government, because that injustice is a market differentiator for them they can then sell.

        I'm not saying they shouldn't lobby for what they believe in, but Apple always stops short of making the world a better place and seems to care only if their walled garden is secure.

        • thewebguyd
          240 dias atrás
          > Apple always stops short of making the world a better place and seems to care only if their walled garden is secure.

          succinctly summed up why I dislike Apple (despite using their products). If you value privacy (against third parties), E2EE, and the tight device coupling then Apple is literally the only choice unless you have the time, knowledge and desire to piecemeal together your own solutions and that really sucks. I have permanent cognitive dissonance because I won't give up the small quality of life features Apple gives me, but I also don't have the time nor skill to replicate their whole ecosystem with Linux, GrapheneOS, writing BLE scripts for watch unlock, fussing with KDE connect for universal clipboard, hosting my own nextcloud instance, etc.

          I wish there was another choice of mobile + accessories that was both privacy respecting and actively using open standards for the betterment of all, not just their own profits.

          • aspenmayer
            240 dias atrás
            > I wish there was another choice of mobile + accessories that was both privacy respecting and actively using open standards for the betterment of all, not just their own profits.

            That's the rub. If you look at Android handset financials, there's almost no money in making Android phones unless the company making them is Samsung, and only certain models sell. Where are all of these profits going to come from?

            I wonder if you'd get farther with a USB SIM adapter under desktop Linux in that regard. I think you'd be hard pressed to end up where you want to in anything more portable than a laptop, since phones themselves are designed to be glorified containers for your mobile ad ID.

            https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Advertising_ID

        • arccy
          240 dias atrás
          s/secure/profitable/
    • lamontcg
      240 dias atrás
      Weird way to manage to do enough contortions to make this all Apple's fault.
      • pydry
        240 dias atrás
        It's not their fault. They did the right thing, which luckily coincided with what is best for their bottom line this one time.
      • bigyabai
        240 dias atrás
        It's Apple's fault. They abandoned principled security a long, long time ago if you were paying attention. Chinese iCloud users have no protection against state-authorized backdoors since Apple removed the hardware security modules[0] that protect user encryption keys (at the PRC's request). Apple doesn't care about protecting their users above and beyond the reach of the state, state surveillance is an inevitability.

        When you start down a slippery slope like this, you burn trust and make people demand transparency. It's impossible for me to say that I'm any more secure as an American user - no trusted third-parties actually audit Apple's American iCloud servers for such backdoors. Users trusting Apple for security are (unfortunately) fish in a barrel, same as ever.

        [0] https://www.nytimes.com/2017/07/12/business/apple-china-data...

    • stephen_g
      240 dias atrás
      I find the snark in your comment very weird and misplaced... Consider what the alternative is - Apple isn't allowed to talk about this, so they would have just had to silently backdoor their encryption for all their users all around the world so the UK intelligence organisations could access anyone Apple user's data...

      Honestly probably nobody would have noticed that, and it would have been the path of least resistance to just comply. Some informed technical people might abandon Apple's platform, but the masses wouldn't have noticed... So how is this "Apple on lobbying for its own money"?

      Honestly that last line just comes across as unhinged... Trying to read your comment in the most generous light but it's not close to reality...

    • johnnyanmac
      240 dias atrás
      >it is never a win when a powerful company or government lobbies for a specific carve out for only it's customers or its country.

      I don't think that is the case here. It's a "secret order" so it's never sure, but there aren't a lot of global tech companies who will comply to give a single government their worldwide data.

    • eviks
      240 dias atrás
      This is an obvious win when fewer people are under the boot even if some people remain they're. It's not a universal win, for sure, but let not perfect be the cause to ignore the good.
    • lenerdenator
      240 dias atrás
      Any port in a storm.
    • jrflowers
      240 dias atrás
      You have a good point. Privacy is a human right, but nobody should be able to fight for it. People or organizations trying to influence the governments that they live or operate under is wrong, as governments (all of them, globally) should simply do the right thing automatically, all the time.

      Sadly every time I’ve tried to explain this to people they always say “you are bleeding a lot” and “dude you just fell down so many stairs. I have never seen anyone fall down that many stairs” or “your head sustained the entire impact of your full bodyweight when you finally reached the bottom of those stairs, how are you even standing?” so I don’t think this is a conversation a lot of people are ready to have

    • throw0101a
      240 dias atrás
      > Congratulations to Apple on lobbying for its own money. Very noble.

      First they came for the Apple fanboys, and I did not speak out— Because I was not a Apple fanboy.

      * https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_They_Came

      If the UK had 'won' again Apple, do you not think that the Android ecosystem would be next? If the UK had 'won', do you not think that Turkey, India, China, etc, would not be lining up as well?

      • Melatonic
        240 dias atrás
        Doesn't the UK law already apply to all those others ?
    • catigula
      240 dias atrás
      Unfortunately the internet is just going to be these ChatGPT comments now, isn't it.
      • hermannj314
        240 dias atrás
        I am a human being, but I have been training on ChatGPT conversations for a few years, is it starting to show?
        • ben_w
          240 dias atrás
          FWIW, I was using em-dash before it was actively the opposite of cool.
          • catigula
            240 dias atrás
            It's not just that, this construction:

            > This isn't X, this is Y

            is a huge ChatGPT signal.

            • dspillett
              240 dias atrás
              But surely it is only a ChatGPT signal because it was a strong signal in the training data. You need more than one strong signal with that sort of potential for false positives to make a reasonably accurate identification.
            • ben_w
              240 dias atrás
              If it is, it's one I've neither heard others mention before nor seen often enough myself to consider it a tell (but for the latter, I do use ChatGPT's customisation options).
            • edflsafoiewq
              240 dias atrás
              I love how completely prosaic phrases are now "ChatGPT signals".
      • accrual
        240 dias atrás
        Do we really think an account that's been here since 2009 and claims to be a software developer is using ChatGPT to write comments on Hacker News?
        • catigula
          240 dias atrás
          I think that people aren't farming out work to ChatGPT as you've imagined, but moreso using it to "help them write" if they're poor writers.
          • hermannj314
            240 dias atrás
            Dude, half my stuff on here is downvoted. I am not a good writer, but I do my best. My opinions and thoughts are my own and I am not using ChatGPT to make hot takes on hacker news, but I do use ChatGPT and have conversations with it.

            Sometimes when I talk to British people, I start to do an accent a little bit. I think I just chameleon my tone to recent conversations, but I can't convince you otherwise.

            Unrelatedly, there is a upended tortoise outside my house struggling in the heat. I am not sure why I refuse to help him, can you tell me why?

            • c420
              240 dias atrás
              The classic Chatgpt "upended tortoise" tangent. This guy, I swear
            • Melatonic
              240 dias atrás
              You're Harrison Ford - we knew it !
          • johnnyanmac
            240 dias atrás
            what in that top comment made you suspicious of ChatGPT usage? It doesn't seem to be that tone at all.
      • DaiPlusPlus
        240 dias atrás
        I checked; their post has good ol' fashioned hyphens, no em-dashes, so it's less likely to be slop.
        • catigula
          240 dias atrás
          Stated above, not just em-dash, but the following:

          > This isn't X, this is Y

          This is ChatGPT's favorite rhetorical flourish without exception.

          • purerandomness
            240 dias atrás
            ChatGPT wouldn't have set the apostrophe incorrectly in "it's customers".
  • Retr0id
    240 dias atrás
    It's great that they're dropping it, but concerning that it was only because of pushback from US politicians.

    Also important to note:

    > With the order now reportedly removed, it’s unclear if Apple will restore access to its ADP service in the UK.

    • ExoticPearTree
      240 dias atrás
      For sure they didn't drop it out of the goodness of their heart.
      • Retr0id
        240 dias atrás
        There was once an idea that elected politicians should champion the interests of their constituents.
        • 201984
          240 dias atrás
          Somehow I don't think this was in the constituents' interests in the first place.
        • ExoticPearTree
          240 dias atrás
          > There was once an idea that elected politicians should champion the interests of their constituents.

          I think that idea died a very long time ago.

          • johnnyanmac
            240 dias atrás
            Yup, and constituent apathy killed it. if people can't hold their reps accountable over even the most obvious BS, and re-elect them anyway, why would reps bother trying to hide it?
    • stronglikedan
      240 dias atrás
      > only because of pushback from US politicians

      Like it or hate it, that's still the way of the world.

    • stephen_g
      240 dias atrás
      The other concerning thing is that it took the otherwise awful Trump administration to push back, while the Biden administration was reportedly going to look the other way (and have been accused of knowing about it but hiding it from Congress) [1].

      1. https://daringfireball.net/linked/2025/02/26/wapo-biden-just...

      • BowBun
        240 dias atrás
        See this is the kind of lying I expect from politicians - misleading people about their policy decisions. Not the constant challenging of recorded fact.
      • johnnyanmac
        240 dias atrás
        Well, Google and Co. are trying to push it worldwide anyway under the ruse of UK law, regardless of administration. I don't see them countering all this AI ID stuff.

        I feel this is more of an "Earth isn't yours to conquer" move rather than one really aimed at protecting US Citizen's data. Governments is simply fighting over who can control how we navigate our tech.

    • varispeed
      240 dias atrás
      The backdoors might still go ahead. What if backing down is just for show? In the end they don't have to let public know, but this information serves a purpose - potential suspects might now think it is okay to use now and fall right into the trap.
    • hardlianotion
      240 dias atrás
      Just rejoice that in this one case, the spinelessness of our elected representatives has some, perhaps temporary, upside.
      • terminalshort
        240 dias atrás
        How is this an example of spinelessness?
        • logicchains
          240 dias atrás
          Maybe they mean the spinelessness of UK representatives?
          • abullinan
            240 dias atrás
            Some people always assume everything is about their country.
          • hardlianotion
            240 dias atrás
            Yep
  • flumpcakes
    240 dias atrás
    Good news for UK people.

    I am all for laws designed to protect children, and stop terrorism. But these 'back door' laws are nearly always very poorly thought out and offers new avenues for 'normal' people to come to harm.

    • throw0101a
      240 dias atrás
      > I am all for laws designed to protect children, and stop terrorism.

      The usual suspects:

      * https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Four_Horsemen_of_the_Infocalyp...

      • fmajid
        240 dias atrás
        The real target: journalists, activists and whistleblowers
        • flumpcakes
          240 dias atrás
          This isn't true on the whole in this context. How does the UK's OSA target journalists, activists and whistleblowers?

          I think this conspiratorial view of these laws is doing more harm than good and ignores the entire issues that these laws are designed to address.

          The problem is we create overly broad laws because:

          - There is a problem with child predation / terrorism - There is a lack of understanding on how technology works - There is faith that the system works and won't ever be abused - There are too few people in community self policing these issues.

          Addressing any one of these in a different way will negate the need for laws like the UK were trying to implement.

          Creating broad gives the police more ability to enforce their spirit. I think that's generally a bad thing when the laws are to do with civil liberties. But maybe a good thing when dealing with, for example, domestic abuse.

          • johnnyanmac
            240 dias atrás
            >How does the UK's OSA target journalists, activists and whistleblowers?

            The general context is it targets "anyone who angers the government". Being able to ban your entire internet if this becomes widespread becomes a very powerful deterrent to opposition. \

            >Creating broad gives the police more ability to enforce their spirit. I think that's generally a bad thing when the laws are to do with civil liberties.

            Given the histories of "enforcing spirits" for both the US and the UK police forces, I'm not sure how or why you'd have faith in their interpretations.

            The police can bring up your info themselves without needing the ability to cut off someone's entire digitial landscape.

          • fmajid
            236 dias atrás
            The article is talking about the UK's RIPA and demanding backdoors into encryption. My comment was not in response to anyone else's, and I never mentioned OSA, although that is also problematic as a censorship vector.

            As an aside, all this demonstrates the UK's lack of a Bill of Rights. And no, the ECHR is not one due to the pernicious doctrine of Parliamentary as opposed to popular sovereignty, and the lack of independence of the Judiciary. No Parliament can bind future Parliaments, which could abolish the Human Rights Act 1998 with a single vote, and indeed many UK politicians are calling for precisely this, versus the complex and deliberately cumbersome procedure the US Constitution has to amend itself. Any Bill of Rights that is subject to the forbearance of the legislative body it is supposed to protect you from is not worth the paper it is written on.

            Obviously, if journalists cannot have encrypted conversations with their sources and whistleblowers don't have anonymous channels to blow the whistle, considering the draconian penalties of the Official Secrets Act (another OSA, coincidence much?) neither will happen, which is exactly by design. Ironically, when the boot was on the other foot like revelations about Boris Johnson or Rishi Sunak's own illegal use of WhatsApp to hide activities covered by public records laws, they backed off.

    • chaostheory
      240 dias atrás
      Back doors just make the device or platform less secure.
    • ben_w
      240 dias atrás
      Mm.

      Unfortunately, I'm highly confident that 90% of the intelligence community looks at us insisting that crypto standards be inviolable, and thinks we're all as infuriatingly naïve as a ChatGPT comment.

      I don't know the true risks of terrorist organisations. I doubt I ever will, because the intelligence community wants to keep its methods secret in order to avoid mildly competent terrorists from avoiding stupid (from MI5/6's POV) mistakes. The counter-point is that such secrecy makes the intelligence organisations themselves a convenient unlit path for a power-hungry subgroup to take over a nation.

      Regarding sexual abuse, the stats are much easier to find, and are much much worse than most people realise to the extent that most people either don't understand what those numbers mean or don't believe them: If you're an American, on your first day in high school, by your second class you have more than even odds of having met a pupil who had already been assaulted, most likely by someone close to the victim such as a relative.

      I don't see how any level of smartphone surveillance will do anything to stop that. Or indeed, any surveillance that isn't continuous monitoring of every kid to make sure such acts don't find them.

      • stephen_g
        240 dias atrás
        I think the problem with terrorism is it's simultaneously more and less than they think. More from the groups they don't expect, and less from the ones they expect it to come from and are surveillance and infiltrating.

        For example, looking back over the history from what has been declassified in my country, the intelligence services spent a huge amount of time and resources infiltrating and surveillance communist groups and university socialist clubs, and then seemed to be completely blind-sided by the rise of Islamic terrorism when 9/11 rolled around... In a similar vein I think to how the UK is spending all this time going after people waving signs supporting Palestinians - they probably honestly think there's a real threat there, and it will turn out to be a huge waste of time and the next real terror threat will come out of some other unexpected group.

        As for assault - yes, it's usually someone they know. Which is why it's ridiculous the resources they spend trying to backdoor private messaging etc. in the name of "protecting the children" when much of it's happening in person...

      • kbelder
        240 dias atrás
        >If you're an American, on your first day in high school, by your second class you have more than even odds of having met a pupil who had already been assaulted, most likely by someone close to the victim such as a relative.

        You're saying that the rate of sexual assault is.. a few percent?

        Too high! I agree. But it's bad form to give convoluted examples in order to give the impression that the actual number is worse than it is.

        • ben_w
          240 dias atrás
          > You're saying that the rate of sexual assault is.. a few percent?

          Specifically of pre-pubescents. This is already enough to exceed the prison capacity of any nation, including El Salvador.

          If I had instead broadened to the under-18 rate of victimisation, about 11% of women are victimised: https://rainn.org/statistics/children-and-teens

          The lifetime risk is higher still.

      • Refreeze5224
        240 dias atrás
        > Unfortunately, I'm highly confident that 90% of the intelligence community looks at us insisting that crypto standards be inviolable, and thinks we're all as infuriatingly naïve as a ChatGPT comment

        Until they can prove this is the case, and not just fear mongering to justify their massive budgets, overreach and assaults on civil liberties, I am happy to continue being considered naïve by them.

    • ACCount37
      240 dias atrás
      I am very much against laws designed to protect children and stop terrorism.

      By now, "think of the children" is a tired cliche of anti-freedom laws. If "protecting children" requires sacrificing freedom for everyone, then children should not be protected.

      Every time I come across another anti-freedom law wrapped in an excuse of "think of the children", I question whether the worshippers of Moloch had the right idea after all.

      • thewebguyd
        240 dias atrás
        > If "protecting children" requires sacrificing freedom for everyone, then children should not be protected.

        Agreed. It all goes back to the famous quote "Those who would give up essential Liberty, to purchase a little temporary Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety." (granted, the quote was about taxation but the principle applies here)

        Much like cybersecurity, it's always a trade off between absolute freedom and absolute safety. You don't get both. Every "safety" measure that gets put in place reduces your level of individual freedom. Go to far in the safety direction and you lose all your freedoms, and that trade off IMO is not worth it.

      • flumpcakes
        240 dias atrás
        > I am very much against laws designed to protect children and stop terrorism.

        This can't be true. You're against a law that says a convicted child rapist cannot work in schools? You're against a law that says people can't take bombs onto planes?

        I think you're being dishonest in your statements, or do not care about anyone else in society.

        • johnnyanmac
          239 dias atrás
          >You're against a law that says a convicted child rapist cannot work in schools?

          I'll be the devil's advocate: for how long and in what way? You can be on the child predator list because a minor caught you peeing on the side of a road. Do they deserve to be blocked out of an industry because of bad luck over something many people have done?

          >You're against a law that says people can't take bombs onto planes?

          Well that led to me not being able to bring a normal stick of deoderant in my bags. So maybe we should review the TSA oversight after 20 years.

          >I think you're being dishonest in your statements, or do not care about anyone else in society.

          and I think you're arguing in bad faith comparing the ability for government to track society's entire digital footprint to imprisoning a convicted criminal.

        • ACCount37
          240 dias atrás
          I do think that both TSA and modern airport security in general should be dismantled. And that any law that claims to "protect children" or "stop terrorists" should be scrutinized as if it was written by Satan himself, with assumed malicious intent.

          This is true for existing laws, and true twice over for anything that's being proposed. It's long overdue for the "safety" plague of "think of the children" to die.

    • amelius
      240 dias atrás
      Meanwhile, who believes that the US has no backdoors in these devices?
      • philistine
        240 dias atrás
        Cold logic dictates otherwise. The UK is part of Five Eyes: total data sharing between intelligence agencies. If that were the case, why would the UK need a law to get data it already has?
        • fsflover
          240 dias atrás
        • Someone
          240 dias atrás
          It wouldn’t need the law, but putting the proposal up and then, after the predictable backlash, retract it could be a ploy to make the criminals/us think they don’t have access to the data now.
          • 0cf8612b2e1e
            240 dias atrás
            WW2, the Allies used all sorts of fake outs to lead the Germans to believe that the Enigma machine remained secure. Many people died for the sake of the secret.

            Given the lengths the government has gone to monitor its citizens, I could believe the technology stack has already been compromised.

          • southernplaces7
            240 dias atrás
            Upvote from me. Your point is completely valid and simply stated, and yes, I agree that they very possibly could do exactly this sort of thing for the sake of play-acting a government blindness that doesn't really exist as such.

            Truly this site is crawling with anal-retentive man-children who downvote over any silly self indulgent bullshit they can think of.

        • kneegerm
          240 dias atrás
          San Bernardino shootings smartypants
      • sneak
        240 dias atrás
        It’s not really a secret; it’s by design and it’s public. iCloud is not end to end encrypted by default. Apple and the state can read the on-by-default iCloud Backup which contains your iMessage sync keys and all your historical iMessages and attachments. iCloud Photos, Contacts, and Mail are all similarly not e2ee and trivially readable by Apple, DHS/FBI, and anyone else under FAA702 (aka PRISM, aka the #1 most used US intel source) without a warrant.

        https://www.reuters.com/article/world/exclusive-apple-droppe...

        Apple processes FAA702 orders on upwards of 80,000 Apple IDs per year per their own annual transparency report.

        Snowden himself said that they see so many nudes that they got desensitized to it.

        This clever setup allows them to claim iMessage is e2ee while still escrowing keys in effective plaintext to Apple in the iCloud Backup, rendering the e2ee totally ineffective.

        I think “backdoor” is probably an appropriate term for it, but they have made no secret whatsoever of it.

        It’s terrifying to think that the US federal government can read every iMessage in the entire world across a billion devices (except China, where the CCP can do the same) in effectively realtime. The power that that enables (if only in blackmail ability) is staggering.

        • staplers
          240 dias atrás

            allows them to claim iMessage is e2ee while still escrowing keys in effective plaintext to Apple in the iCloud Backup
          
          Does this also apply to their advanced data protection feature?
          • thewebguyd
            240 dias atrás
            I don' think so, but, even with advanced data protection on - if you communicate with someone via iMessage, for example, that does not use advanced data protection, and then they use iCloud backup, then it nullifies it essentially. Feds could get your messages via the recipients iCloud backup.

            Advanced Data Protection needs to be turned on for both you, and everyone you communicate with if you want the full chain to be E2EE. Your communications are only ever as secure as its recipient.

            • staplers
              238 dias atrás
              Good point. A lot like pgp and email in that sense.
          • intrasight
            240 dias atrás
            My read is that it does not apply to ADP.

            Also, what regular criminal, let alone terrorist, would leave iCloud backup turned on after all the hacks and leaks over the years. I assume that most in the HN community, like myself, have iCloud backup turned off.

            • sneak
              240 dias atrás
              Criminals (that get caught, or get put under surveillance) are generally criminals because they are stupid.

              I would venture a guess that almost all criminals have iCloud Backup enabled, because that is the default setting.

      • johnisgood
        240 dias atrás
        Hopefully no one, in services available globally (i.e. not US-specific), just to be sure.
      • sedivy94
        240 dias atrás
        Why litigate it when you can buy it from the NSO / IDF?
  • tehwebguy
    240 dias atrás
    Title should say "reportedly drops" or "according to US official." No proof is offered other than a tweet from Tulsi Gabbard.
    • lotsofpulp
      240 dias atrás
      I wouldn’t have even bothered to click on the comments if that was in the title. Thanks for illuminating the lack of credible source.
  • BCM43
    240 dias atrás
    “As a result, the UK has agreed to drop its mandate for Apple to provide a ‘back door’ that would have enabled access to the protected encrypted data of American citizens and encroached on our civil liberties.”

    Back doors to end-to-end encryption are considered bad now? Someone should tell the FBI. https://www.fbi.gov/how-we-investigate/lawful-access/lawful-...

  • pacifika
    240 dias atrás
    > Apple can no longer offer Advanced Data Protection (ADP) in the United Kingdom to new users.

    Still there.

    • Melatonic
      240 dias atrás
      Yeah if this is true - bit sketchy
  • rdm_blackhole
    240 dias atrás
    Small reprieve. Let's hope that Apple pushes back on Chat Control as well.
  • Canada
    240 dias atrás
    They will try again
  • Ms-J
    240 dias atrás
    The reason the UK dropped the demand is because they already have backdoor access to personal data using multiple methods, and to make the topic disappear for the time being.

    Never use a mobile for anything that requires privacy or security. It's the intelligence agencies favourite tool.

  • gausswho
    240 dias atrás
    Smoke and mirrors. The UK government got what they want with Apple disabling ADP. Until that's turned on, all iCloud backups are available to them.

    That Apple can even claim it encrypts your data is such a bald-faced lie when Advanced Data Protection defaults to off.

  • indymike
    240 dias atrás
    First rule of backdoors: the intended user may not be the only user.
  • oscord
    240 dias atrás
    Which means they got it.
    • rusk
      240 dias atrás
      Or the MOD told them they’ve had it all this time and don’t draw any more attention to it
  • neom
    240 dias atrás
    Don't many governments themselves use Apple, especially the Americans? I always found this a weird demand if they do.
    • KerrAvon
      240 dias atrás
      Governments generally use special procedures for securing secret information, which makes this a non-issue for government use, assuming government employees follow the procedures, which apparently the Trump administration doesn’t.
      • thewebguyd
        240 dias atrás
        Even if they did, it'd be like the proposed chat control, where there are carve outs for politicians.

        Rules for thee, not for me.

  • grahar64
    240 dias atrás
    Or did they get what they want?
  • alfiedotwtf
    240 dias atrás
    See you all around in a few months when they try the exact same thing :head slap:
  • crinkly
    240 dias atrás
    So when can I have ADP back?

    Bet that's not happening...

    • HeckFeck
      240 dias atrás
      We'll get ADB back before we get ADP back.
  • Astro-Domine
    240 dias atrás
    Quis custodiet ipsos custodes?
  • oliwarner
    240 dias atrás
    ... says the most "truthy" US government since records began.

    I don't want to be overly cynical but I'm resigned to never truly know details of national security. I have opinions but nobody is listening to them.

  • rtkwe
    240 dias atrás
    For now... they've tried and dropped this a half dozen times over the years.
  • strangescript
    240 dias atrás
    more important things to yell about now like global id and age verification and doing everything in their power to hamstring AI development
  • Slava_Propanei
    240 dias atrás
    [dead]
  • globalnode
    240 dias atrás
    but what about the children! /s
    • a5c11
      240 dias atrás
      Don't worry, politicians will take care of them.
  • rickdarlino
    240 dias atrás
    [flagged]
  • orangejuice45
    240 dias atrás
    another reason to award the Nobel Prize to DJT if it was ever necessary