Apple intensifies battle against UK government's push for iCloud backdoor

Alfonso Maruccia

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In brief: UK authorities have had the power to break encryption and access user data since 2016. Recently, Apple was forced to comply with this law and chose to significantly weaken encryption instead, but the battle is far from over.

Apple is taking its fight against the UK government's attempt to access iCloud user data to the Investigatory Powers Tribunal, an independent judicial body that reviews complaints against national security services. According to unnamed sources cited by the Financial Times, Apple's legal challenge is the first of its kind and could serve as a key test case for the Investigatory Powers Act, which was enacted nine years ago.

The IPT could hear the case as early as this month, the sources said, though a public hearing remains uncertain. Apple is seeking a full reversal of the government's demand to install a backdoor in the iCloud platform, while UK authorities may ask the court to limit public disclosure due to national security or other classified concerns.

The case is so secretive that Apple cannot discuss it publicly. The company received a technical capability notice (TCN) under the IPA in January, requiring it to bypass or weaken the Advanced Data Protection feature available to iCloud users. Apple has reportedly resisted such notices from UK authorities since ADP's introduction in 2022 but was ultimately forced to disable the additional encryption layer altogether.

Cupertino is resisting the UK government's push for unrestricted access to iCloud, arguing that the platform stores data from users not only in the UK but worldwide. Meanwhile, British officials claim Apple has failed to comply with the technical capability notice order. The Home Office insists the government's goal is simply to protect citizens from the "worst crimes," including child exploitation and terrorism.

Ironically, a government spokesperson also stated that the Home Office aims to safeguard people's privacy – while seeking access to the iCloud data of hundreds of millions of users across the globe. Last month, Apple reiterated that it has no plans to create a "master key" or backdoor for iCloud, despite pressure from UK authorities.

According to the Financial Times, Apple's appeal to the Investigatory Powers Tribunal is unprecedented in the UK legal system. If the IPT rules against the company, Apple could escalate the case to a higher court in the future.

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I thoight you guys claimed Apple bent the knee. Well good on them, but will they stand up to Agent Orange?
 
I thoight you guys claimed Apple bent the knee. Well good on them, but will they stand up to Agent Orange?
I wouldn't worry about it. Tim Cook already donated $1 million to the inauguration and spent a decent amount of time verbally fellating the Orange Imbecile. Apple knows how to play this right. They know all it takes is stroking that orange ego and you can get anything you want.
 
When you have to agree with Apple, you know its a completely moronic decision by the UK government, surely the dumbasses in GCHQ et al. know there isn't some magical gate on backdoors that only opens to intelligence people, once its there, its ripe for a criminal or other foreign state to break in
 
Well, we have to know which native Brits are complaining about their daughters being raped and murdered, right?
 
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