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Apple says it will pull services including FaceTime and iMessage in the UK if plans to amend surveillance legislation that would require tech companies to make major security and privacy changes go ahead (via BBC News).

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The UK government is planning to update the Investigatory Powers Act (IPA), which came into effect in 2016. The Act of Parliament allows the British Home Office to force technology companies to disable security features like end-to-end encryption without telling the public. The IPA also enables storage of internet browsing records and authorises the bulk collection of personal data in the UK. Due to the secrecy surrounding these demands, little is known about how many have been issued and complied with.

Currently, this process involves independent oversight via a review process and tech companies can appeal before having to comply. Under the proposed update to the IPA, disabling security features without informing the public would have to be immediate.

The UK government started an eight-week consultation process on the proposed amendments to the IPA open to professional bodies, interest groups, academia, and the wider public. Apple has submitted a nine-page-long document condemning many of the changes.

The company opposes the requirement to inform 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, and having to take action immediately if a request to disable or block a feature is received from the Home Office without review or an appeals process.

Apple also highlighted that some requested feature changes would require a software update, so could not be implemented without public knowledge. The proposals "constitute a serious and direct threat to data security and information privacy" that would affect people outside the UK, Apple claims.

The company added that it would not make changes to security features specifically for one country that would weaken a product for all users, suggesting that services like FaceTime and iMessage will simply be removed in the UK if the amendments proceed.

Apple, WhatsApp, and Signal also oppose a clause in the UK's proposed Online Safety Bill that would allow its communications regulator to require companies to install technology to scan for CSAM in encrypted messaging apps and other services. Signal has threatened to leave the UK over the matter.

Article Link: Apple Threatens to Pull FaceTime and iMessage in the UK Over Proposed Surveillance Law Changes
 
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Apple Knowledge Navigator

macrumors 68040
Mar 28, 2010
3,543
11,894
The UK government is planning to update the Investigatory Powers Act (IPA) 2016, which allows the Home Office to force tech companies to disable security features like end-to-end encryption without telling the public.
Make sense. If there was a situation that threatened the security of the public, they would have the power to investigate the guilty parties.

Historically Apple has shown that they’re unwilling to co-operate with unlocking phones for authorities. Can you blame the government for wanting to side-step them?
 

CarAnalogy

macrumors 601
Jun 9, 2021
4,231
7,777
I remember the speech Clinton gave about the Internet opening up China, and how censorship would be impossible.

Now it seems the opposite has happened. Authoritarians have effectively clamped down on technology and used it against people, and instead of China opening up, other countries said “hey that’s pretty good, let’s be more like that!”
 

ForkHandles

macrumors 6502
Jun 8, 2012
458
1,099
This is the most illiberal UK government we have ever endured. They break things, they lie, they remove our freedoms.

It is now illegal to protest in the UK now ffs. The majority of the press here enjoy lucrative government advertising contracts so are virtually nothing more than mouthpieces.
 
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CarAnalogy

macrumors 601
Jun 9, 2021
4,231
7,777
Make sense. If there was a situation that threatened the security of the public, they would have the power to investigate the guilty parties.

Historically Apple has shown that they’re unwilling to co-operate with unlocking phones for authorities. Can you blame the government for wanting to side-step them?

Yes. Governments already have the power to compel Apple to do things. Apple doesn’t have to sit back and let the governments make them do even more.

If you’re referring to the San Bernadino shooter, the FBI didn’t just want that phone’s data. They wanted Apple to make a version of iOS that skips the lock screen that they could then install on any iPhone to unlock it. Apple refused to do that. They cooperated in many other ways.
 
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