Home    >    This government no longer wants to open your iPhone's encrypted backdoor – so why are iCloud users still at risk?

This government no longer wants to open your iPhone's encrypted backdoor – so why are iCloud users still at risk?

For six months the UK has been trying to force Apple to open a "backdoor" to get access to encrypted data on iPhones, but now, the requests have been withdrawn. The good news comes from none other that US Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard, who made the announcement on X:
The so-called iPhone "backdoor" was first discussed publicly at the beginning of February and Gabbard says it would have "enabled access to the protected encrypted data of American citizens and encroached on our civil liberties".Of course, this got US lawmakers fuming shortly after and the UK request drew strong criticism from both Republican and Democratic lawmakers in the United States. Members from both parties argued that the request could put Americans at risk. Their concern was twofold: not only could such a backdoor be exploited by malicious actors, but it would also grant UK authorities the ability to access encrypted data belonging to US users.

Do governments actually want to spy on users en masse?

Themobiletechus

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