Apple Opposes India's Plan to Access iOS Source Code

Apple and other smartphone manufacturers are resisting an Indian government proposal that would require them to hand over source code for security review, reports Reuters.

apple india
The proposal is included in a package of 83 security standards that India is considering as legal requirements, as part of Prime Minister Narendra Modi's efforts to boost security of user data following increases in online fraud and data breaches in the country.

Beyond routine measures like notifying the government of major updates and storing security audit logs, the standards would force manufacturers to hand over source code to government-designated labs to check for vulnerabilities.

Apple, Google, Samsung, Xiaomi, and industry group MAIT have all reportedly objected, citing a lack of global precedent and concerns about revealing proprietary details.

The standards were originally drafted in 2023 but are only now under government consideration. Tech company executives are expected to meet Tuesday to discuss the matter.

IT secretary S. Krishnan told Reuters the government will address legitimate concerns "with an open mind," adding it was "premature to read more" into the proposals.

The country's IT ministry also said it "refutes the statement" that it is considering seeking source code from smartphone makers, despite the requirement appearing in the government documents reviewed by Reuters.

A ministry spokesperson told the news organization it could not comment further due to ongoing consultation with tech companies on the proposals.

Apple in December resisted an Indian government directive that would require all iPhones sold in the country to ship with a preinstalled state-run security app. The government ultimately decided not to make the pre-installation mandatory for manufacturers after protests from privacy advocates, political opposition, and industry pushback.

Tag: India

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Top Rated Comments

SPUY767 Avatar
3 weeks ago
India is second only to China in IP theft. That's gonna be a hard pass for me.
Score: 30 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Dj64Mk7 Avatar
3 weeks ago
This sounds like a gross overreach of what government is supposed to be? I really don’t understand why India is like this, instead of trying to cooperate in the global economy?
Score: 26 Votes (Like | Disagree)
JulianL Avatar
3 weeks ago
"the standards would force manufacturers to hand over source code to government-designated labs to check for vulnerabilities".

Why would staff at a government-designated lab coming in cold to a huge code base be more likely to find vulnerabilities than Apple engineers - Apple engineers working in a environment where security/privacy is one of the cornerstones of how Apple positions itself in the marketplace?

I suppose one argument against that could be that people can miss things when reviewing their own work - don't be the only one proof reading your own copy - but when I was in the industry the places I worked at had mechanisms (group code reviews) to get other eyes on individual developers' new code before it was committed. I confess that I've no idea whether that is still standard practice in OS development teams but I'd hope that it is.

Apple also offers "potential maximum rewards of over $5M" (https://security.apple.com/bounty/) for people identifying vulnerabilities so that, plus Apple's access to the general bug reporting databases and analytics data coming off phones means that Apple has way more input data than some government-designated lab that presumably isn't paying big bucks for experts to try and find vulnerabilities and tracking device issues across the entire user base (at least for those users who have opted into analytics) in near real time.
Score: 21 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Dan From Canada Avatar
3 weeks ago
Who do you trust more with your personal info? Apple or Modi?
Score: 15 Votes (Like | Disagree)
kenny7 Avatar
3 weeks ago
Indian government keeps proposing clownish things and then backs down after backlash.
Score: 12 Votes (Like | Disagree)
JMalone Avatar
3 weeks ago
The country that houses the world’s most cybercriminals, thieves and pirates wants to pirate and steal software because they can’t innovate their own good software. China must be laughing at India.

The US should slap even bigger tariffs and sanctions on India until they pay back every pensioner who was robbed by fake tech support.
Score: 11 Votes (Like | Disagree)