Apple: We’d pull iMessage and FaceTime from the UK rather than destroy end-to-end encryption if controversial law passes appeared first on MacDailyNews. Apple: We’d pull iMessage and FaceTime from the UK rather than destroy end-to-end encryption if controversial law passes appeared first on MacDailyNews. Apple: We’d pull iMessage and FaceTime from the UK rather than destroy end-to-end encryption if controversial law passes appeared first on MacDailyNews. Apple: We’d pull iMessage and FaceTime from the UK rather than destroy end-to-end encryption if controversial law passes appeared first on MacDailyNews.
Apple says it would pull services such as iMessage and FaceTime from the UK rather than obliterate customers’ security and privacy if new proposals to destroy end-to-end encryption are made

Apple says it would pull services such as iMessage and FaceTime from the UK rather than obliterate customers’ security and privacy if new proposals to destroy end-to-end encryption are made law and acted upon as the government fumbles toward updating its so-called Investigatory Powers Act (IPA) 2016.

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The UK government wants messaging services to seek approval for security features before releasing them to customers. The act lets the UK government demand that security features such as end-to-end encryption be disabled immediately upon request, without telling end users.

Zoe Kleinman for BBC News:

Many messaging services currently offer end-to-end encryption – so messages can be unscrambled by only the devices sending and receiving them.

WhatsApp and Signal are among the platforms to have opposed a clause in the Online Safety Bill allowing the communications regulator to require companies to install technology to scan for child-abuse material in encrypted messaging apps and other services.

They will not comply with it, they say, with Signal threatening to “walk” from the UK.

Apple has also opposed the plan.

The government has opened an eight-week consultation on the proposed amendments to the IPA., which already enables the storage of internet browsing records for 12 months and authorises the bulk collection of personal data.

Apple has consistently opposed the act, originally dubbed a “snooper’s charter” by critics. Its submission to the current consultation is nine pages long, opposing:

• having to tell the Home Office of any changes to product security features before they are released

• the requirement for non-UK-based companies to comply with changes that would affect their product globally – such as providing a backdoor to end-to-end encryption

• having to take action immediately if a notice to disable or block a feature is received from the Home Office, rather than waiting until after the demand has been reviewed or appealed against

Apple says:

• It would not make changes to security features specifically for one country that would weaken a product for all users.

• Some changes would require issuing a software update so could not be made secretly

• The proposals “constitute a serious and direct threat to data security and information privacy” that would affect people outside the UK

Cyber-security expert Prof Alan Woodward, from Surrey University, said technology companies were unlikely to accept the proposals.

MacDailyNews Take: Governments that stoop to using “child-abuse” as their rational for scanning people’s computers, appealing to the emotions of the intellectually-challenged, are desperate liars.

A “back door” for government is a “back door” for everyone.

In “1984,” George Orwell has proved his prescience manyfold which, if the British people keep electing abject morons who back idiotic policies like this, may also someday include Britain being called “Airstrip One,” a “miserable and run-down” province, with London consisting almost solely of “decaying suburbs.”

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The post Apple: We’d pull iMessage and FaceTime from the UK rather than destroy end-to-end encryption if controversial law passes appeared first on MacDailyNews.

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