logo
UK Agrees Drop Demand For Apple To Create Backdoor Access

UK Agrees Drop Demand For Apple To Create Backdoor Access

Gulf Insidera day ago
The UK government has agreed to drop its request that Apple provide it with backdoor access to user data, U.S. Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard said on Monday.
Gabbard stated on X that the agreement came after months of working with UK partners, alongside President Donald Trump, and Vice President JD Vance, to ensure Americans' private data and civil liberties are protected
'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,' she said.
Earlier this year, reports emerged that the UK government had issued Apple a 'technical capability notice,' requiring the company to provide access to encrypted user data under the Investigatory Powers Act of 2016. In response, Apple halted its Advanced Data Protection (ADP) feature for users in the UK, citing concerns over data breaches.
The iPhone maker stated in a Feb. 24 blog post that it has 'never built a backdoor or master key to any of our products or services and we never will.'
The ADP feature provides end-to-end encryption for iCloud storage, preventing non-account holders—including governments and hackers—from accessing data such as photos, documents, and notes. Without ADP, certain types of iCloud data will no longer be fully encrypted, making it potentially accessible to third parties with the proper legal authority.
'Apple remains committed to offering our users the highest level of security for their personal data and we are hopeful that we will be able to do so in the future in the United Kingdom,' Apple stated at the time.
In May, U.S. House Judiciary Committee Chair Jim Jordan and U.S. House Foreign Affairs Committee Chair Brian Mast sent a letter to UK Home Secretary Yvette Cooper, urging her to allow Apple to disclose the order's existence to the U.S. Department of Justice so the department can assess whether the order complies with a U.S.-UK bilateral agreement under the CLOUD Act, which prohibits orders requiring companies to decrypt data.
According to the letter, U.S. companies are prohibited under UK laws to disclose or confirm the existence of such an order, and doing so constitutes a criminal offense, even if the disclosure is made to the company's home government.
The U.S. lawmakers warned that the UK's order for Apple to create a backdoor could lead to some implications, as it might be exploited by cybercriminals and authoritarian regimes.
Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard speaks to reporters during a briefing at the White House in Washington on July 23, 2025. Travis Gillmore/The Epoch Times
'These vulnerabilities would not only affect UK users but also American citizens and others worldwide, given the global nature of Apple's services,' they stated in the letter.
The UK's Home Office and Apple did not return requests for comment by publication time.
Also read: Air Support Could Be Part Of Security Guarantees For Ukraine: White House
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Meta Artificially Inflated Ecommerce Ad Metrics
Meta Artificially Inflated Ecommerce Ad Metrics

Gulf Insider

time2 hours ago

  • Gulf Insider

Meta Artificially Inflated Ecommerce Ad Metrics

Meta, the parent company of Facebook and Instagram, has been accused of artificially inflating the performance metrics of its ecommerce advertising product, Shops ads, according to a whistleblower complaint filed Wednesday in a U.K. employment tribunal. The complaint, brought by Samujjal Purkayastha, a former product manager on Meta's Shops ads team, alleges the company misled advertisers by overstating the return on ad spend (ROAS), making its newer ad offering appear more effective than competing products, ADWEEK reports. According to the filing with the London Central Employment Tribunal, Meta allegedly boosted Shops ads' performance numbers by: Counting shipping fees and taxes as part of total revenue as part of total revenue Subsidizing bids in ad auctions to secure more prominent placement in ad auctions to secure more prominent placement Applying undisclosed discounts to give the impression of stronger results Internal reviews conducted in early 2024 revealed Shops ads' ROAS had been inflated between 17% and 19%, according to the complaint. Meta's other ad products – as well as competitors like Google – calculate ROAS using net figures, excluding shipping and taxes. Without the added fees, the filing claims, Shops ads performed no better than Meta's traditional ad products. 'This was significant,' the complaint states. 'In addition to the ROAS performance metric being overstated by nearly a fifth, it meant that, rather than having exceeded our primary target, the Shops Ads team had in fact missed it once the figure was reduced to take account of the artificial inflation.' The filing links these alleged practices to a broader effort inside Meta to recover from the effects of Apple's App Tracking Transparency (ATT) feature, rolled out in 2021. Apple's policy limited access to iOS user data, a cornerstone of Meta's ad business. Former Meta CFO David Wehner warned during a 2021 earnings call that the change could cost the company 'on the order of $10 billion.' By encouraging advertisers to use Shops ads, which kept transactions inside Meta's apps, the company could collect more first-party purchase data and reduce its reliance on Apple's tracking permissions. According to Purkayastha, Meta began subsidizing Shops ads in auctions, sometimes by as much as 100%, ensuring they appeared more often than other ad formats. This increased visibility, artificially boosted conversions and made Shops ads seem like a stronger investment. Purkayastha joined Meta in 2020 as part of the Facebook Artificial Intelligence Applied Research team before being reassigned to the Shops Ads team in March 2022. He remained at the company until February 19, 2025. The complaint says Purkayastha repeatedly raised concerns in meetings with senior leadership between 2022 and 2024, questioning the accuracy of Shops ads' reported results. He claims the company continued using the disputed methodology despite internal objections. The complaint also points to Meta's tracking tools as part of its strategy to maintain advertising performance after Apple's privacy changes. Aggregated Event Measurement (AEM1) , introduced in April 2021, used machine learning to estimate conversions while respecting users who opted out of tracking. , introduced in April 2021, used machine learning to estimate conversions while respecting users who opted out of tracking. AEM2, rolled out shortly thereafter, allegedly linked in-app activity to browsing and purchases on third-party sites using personal identifiers like names, emails, phone numbers, and IP addresses. According to ADWEEK; In the complaint, Purkayastha said he believed AEM2 bypassed restrictions imposed by Apple's privacy framework, though it mitigated much of the loss of data from the privacy changes. Purkayastha was terminated from Meta in February 2025, according to the complaint. His filing with the employment tribunal is part of an application for interim relief, requesting that his former position be reinstated. Meta has not yet commented on the complaint. A request for comment from ADWEEK, which first reported the filing, was not returned by the time of publication. Also read: Meta To Introduce Teen Accounts For Facebook

Israel Considers Military Recruitment Inside USA And France As Soldier Shortage Persists
Israel Considers Military Recruitment Inside USA And France As Soldier Shortage Persists

Gulf Insider

time15 hours ago

  • Gulf Insider

Israel Considers Military Recruitment Inside USA And France As Soldier Shortage Persists

Amid an enduring soldier shortage, and as an all-out occupation of Gaza looms, the Israel Defense Forces are considering a campaign to recruit soldiers from Jewish populations living in the United States and other countries around the world. According to Israeli Army Radio, a state media outlet, Israel may mount an effort to recruit 600 to 700 Jews a year from the diaspora, a term referring to Jews living somewhere other than Israel. At first, Israel would concentrate its effort in the United States and France, the countries with the two largest Jewish populations, at roughly 6 million and 450,000, respectively. As of February, there were 3,500 diaspora soldiers serving in the IDF, with nearly 900 of them Americans. Israel calls such troops lone soldiers. 'The majority of American lone soldiers are coming after high school, either directly after high school or after a gap year program,' said Noya Govrin, Director of the Lone Soldiers Program at Nefesh b'Nefesh, a nonprofit that encourages Americans and Canadians to 'make aliyah' — that is, to move to Israel and become citizens. 'In the past two years, there has been a notable increase in college graduates that come to Israel to serve as lone soldiers,' she told Times of Israel . Earlier this month, one of those American lone soldiers who'd recently returned from service in Gaza was the target of an overnight arson attack on vehicles parked at his family's house in suburban St. Louis, Missouri. Graffiti painted on the street accused him of being a murderer and proclaimed DEATH TO THE IDF. BREAKING:🇮🇱🇺🇲 An Israeli soldier with US citizenship was attacked in Clayton, Missouri, his vehicles were set on fire and destroyed. Graffiti outside the family's home called for death to the IDF. — Megatron (@Megatron_ron) August 6, 2025 'Awkward moment for some of my fellow Jews in the diaspora,' wrote Rafael Shimunov, New Yorker host of a 'Jewish Left' radio show. 'Cheerleading Israelis sending their kids to do genocide, but will never send their own.' The IDF is coping with a 10,000- to 12,000-soldier shortfall. There are two principal drivers: draft-dodging by ultra-Orthodox Israelis, and lower retention of current soldiers, who are leaving the IDF at an elevated rate as the war in Gaza nears its second anniversary. Some are voluntarily leaving via extreme means: At least 16 soldiers have killed themselves in 2025, and 54 since Oct 7. More than 3,700 have been diagnosed with PTSD. There are some 14,600 deserters, according to the Jerusalem Post , which appears to apply that term to draft-dodgers. The IDF is about to close the window on a sort of amnesty plan, which gives draft-dodgers until Thursday to sign up for service by phone or online and then be rapidly ushered into the IDF's ranks in the coming weeks. If they do, they'll be spared criminal charges and penalties that include a prohibition on foreign travel. The issue of ultra-Orthodox military conscription has threatened to topple Netanyahu's government, as parties representing that community have demanded legislation that would grant them an exemption from military service. In June 2024, Israel's Supreme Court ruled that the government must start drafting the Haredi, who'd previously enjoyed an exemption ever since Israel's creation in 1948. Haredi men typically dedicate their entire lives to religious study in seminaries called Yeshivas and receive public welfare. With Israel waging a multi-front war encompassing Gaza, the West Bank, Lebanon, Syria, Yemen and Iran, the exemption has become increasingly unpopular with the other segments of Israeli society that must heed the call. As public opinion among both American Jews and non-Jews grows increasingly negative toward Israel's war in Gaza and the Zionist state in general, it remains to be seen how fruitful a recruitment campaign inside America would be. Priming the pump for IDF recruiters, Israel-catering members of the US Congress have controversially introduced a bill that would extend credit and employment privileges enjoyed by US military service members to American citizens serving in the IDF — with no such privilege for service in any other foreign army.

UK Agrees Drop Demand For Apple To Create Backdoor Access
UK Agrees Drop Demand For Apple To Create Backdoor Access

Gulf Insider

timea day ago

  • Gulf Insider

UK Agrees Drop Demand For Apple To Create Backdoor Access

The UK government has agreed to drop its request that Apple provide it with backdoor access to user data, U.S. Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard said on Monday. Gabbard stated on X that the agreement came after months of working with UK partners, alongside President Donald Trump, and Vice President JD Vance, to ensure Americans' private data and civil liberties are protected '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,' she said. Earlier this year, reports emerged that the UK government had issued Apple a 'technical capability notice,' requiring the company to provide access to encrypted user data under the Investigatory Powers Act of 2016. In response, Apple halted its Advanced Data Protection (ADP) feature for users in the UK, citing concerns over data breaches. The iPhone maker stated in a Feb. 24 blog post that it has 'never built a backdoor or master key to any of our products or services and we never will.' The ADP feature provides end-to-end encryption for iCloud storage, preventing non-account holders—including governments and hackers—from accessing data such as photos, documents, and notes. Without ADP, certain types of iCloud data will no longer be fully encrypted, making it potentially accessible to third parties with the proper legal authority. 'Apple remains committed to offering our users the highest level of security for their personal data and we are hopeful that we will be able to do so in the future in the United Kingdom,' Apple stated at the time. In May, U.S. House Judiciary Committee Chair Jim Jordan and U.S. House Foreign Affairs Committee Chair Brian Mast sent a letter to UK Home Secretary Yvette Cooper, urging her to allow Apple to disclose the order's existence to the U.S. Department of Justice so the department can assess whether the order complies with a U.S.-UK bilateral agreement under the CLOUD Act, which prohibits orders requiring companies to decrypt data. According to the letter, U.S. companies are prohibited under UK laws to disclose or confirm the existence of such an order, and doing so constitutes a criminal offense, even if the disclosure is made to the company's home government. The U.S. lawmakers warned that the UK's order for Apple to create a backdoor could lead to some implications, as it might be exploited by cybercriminals and authoritarian regimes. Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard speaks to reporters during a briefing at the White House in Washington on July 23, 2025. Travis Gillmore/The Epoch Times 'These vulnerabilities would not only affect UK users but also American citizens and others worldwide, given the global nature of Apple's services,' they stated in the letter. The UK's Home Office and Apple did not return requests for comment by publication time. Also read: Air Support Could Be Part Of Security Guarantees For Ukraine: White House

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store