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UK May Backtrack on Controversial Demand for Backdoor to Encrypted Apple User Data

The British government may be forced to drop its plans to force Apple to build a backdoor to access encrypted user data, the Financial Times reports.

iCloud Versus UK Key Feature
In February, it emerged that the British government had secretly demanded Apple gives it access to all encrypted user content uploaded to iCloud. It argued the ability, which is unprecedented for any other democratic country, is necessary for law enforcement and the security services to investigate serious crimes such as terrorism and child sexual abuse. In response, Apple removed Advanced Data Protection from the UK‌ and filed a legal complaint in an attempt to quash the demand.

Now, senior British officials speaking to the Financial Times say that the UK is likely to drop the plan amid pressure from the U.S. government:

This is something that the vice-president is very annoyed about and which needs to be resolved. The Home Office is basically going to have to back down.

One of the challenges for the tech partnerships we're working on is the encryption issue. It's a big red line in the US — they don't want us messing with their tech companies.

The demand to build a backdoor into ‌iCloud‌ and break Apple's end-to-end encryption could impede vital technology agreements with the U.S. related to artificial intelligence and data partnerships, and has already caused friction between the two governments. Senior members of the U.S. administration, including the President, Vice-President, and Director of National Intelligence, have all raised strong objections to the British government's request.

The Financial Times says that the British Home Office has handled the issue of Apple encryption "very badly" and now has "its back against the wall." For now, the government still appears to be pursuing the demand and apparently discussed next steps with lawyers as recently as this month.

Note: Due to the political or social nature of the discussion regarding this topic, the discussion thread is located in our Political News forum. All forum members and site visitors are welcome to read and follow the thread, but posting is limited to forum members with at least 100 posts.

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Top Rated Comments

GrassShark Avatar
11 months ago
Would be good to see this go away. I'm not in the UK but govts demanding backdoors into encryption is a pretty much never a good thing.
Score: 40 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Justin Cymbal Avatar
11 months ago
There is no such thing as a back door

This is math. Numbers don’t lie

A back door for one is a back door for all and any back doors for specific governments will eventually be decrypted, rendering the encryption useless for everyone
Score: 37 Votes (Like | Disagree)
11 months ago
Lol UK and EU are just wasting everyone's time and resources.
Score: 27 Votes (Like | Disagree)
11 months ago
A government trying to do something so insanely dumb that I’m siding with our administration on the matter. A shameful government.
Score: 23 Votes (Like | Disagree)
krspkbl Avatar
11 months ago
good. I’m british and our government is going in the wrong direction in so many ways. Thanks USA for putting UK government in its place.

Hopefully Apple will enable ADP again.


A government trying to do something so insanely dumb that I’m siding with our administration on the matter. A shameful government.
Feels weird I’m siding with the US gov here but it shows how silly my goverment is being.
Score: 20 Votes (Like | Disagree)
burgman Avatar
11 months ago

Now, senior British officials speaking to the Financial Times say that the UK is likely to drop the plan amid pressure from the U.S. government:
Given US government now being in bed with Palantir I’m sure we’ve offered Britain their services. With laws in both countries we will never know. The way US suddenly said never mind, after seriously pushing for a similar backdoor, means something changed.
Score: 12 Votes (Like | Disagree)
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