
Apple Ordered To Provide UK Gov't Access To All User Data On The Cloud
The Washington Post reported Friday that the United Kingdom's deep state has demanded that Apple create a back door for them to retrieve all the content any Apple user worldwide has uploaded to the cloud—what would be an unprecedented erosion of online privacy and civil liberties.
Citing anonymous sources, the Post reported that the British government's undisclosed order was issued last month. It reportedly requires Apple to give officials blanket capability to view fully encrypted material.
Typically, Apple has assisted authorities on a case-by-case basis—such as helping the FBI access a terrorist's phone, for example. The Post noted that the access sought by the UK 'has no known precedent in major democracies.'
🚨WaPo published an EXTREMELY important story today about a secret UK order for Apple to provide it w/ total access to all user data on the cloud — an order that would implicate Americans and the entire world.The Post rightly notes that the UK's order "has no known precedent in… pic.twitter.com/pA3uvpnekc — Ken Silva (@JD_Cashless) February 7, 2025
According to the Post , the UK's order was made pursuant to the sweeping U.K. Investigatory Powers Act of 2016, which authorizes law enforcement to compel assistance from companies to access user data.
'The law, known by critics as the Snoopers' Charter, makes it a criminal offense to reveal that the government has even made such a demand,' the Post reported.
'Apple can appeal the U.K. capability notice to a secret technical panel, which would consider arguments about the expense of the requirement, and to a judge who would weigh whether the request was in proportion to the government's needs. But the law does not permit Apple to delay complying during an appeal.'
An Apple spokesman reportedly declined to comment. The Post reported that Apple is likely to stop offering encrypted storage in the UK.
'Yet that concession would not fulfill the U.K. demand for backdoor access to the service in other countries, including the United States,' the newspaper added.
Western countries, including the U.S., have been pushing for total access to online user data for years.
In March 2021, for example, former FBI Director Chris Wray told the Senate Judiciary Committee that encryption was stifling his agents from investigating domestic extremism.
According to Wray and other law enforcers, tech companies should be able to build 'backdoors' into their encryption that preserves privacy, while allowing for access when necessary. That, they say, strikes the proper balance between data security and national security.
However, numerous tech experts, civil libertarians, and others say that it's impossible to build a backdoor that can't be exploited by hackers. They also say that by banning encryption, the United States would be following in the footsteps of authoritarian countries such as China, which blocked the encrypted messaging app Signal.
'It is important to understand that any kind of back door (or front door) access for the 'good guys' can also be exploited by the 'bad guys,'' the pro-industry Information Technology & Innovation Foundation stated in a July 2020 report.
'For example, key escrow systems would introduce new attack vectors that could allow attackers to gain access to encrypted information, such as by compromising the system that maintains copies of the keys.'
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