Apple turns off data protection in the UK rather than comply with backdoor mandate

Apple turns off data protection in the UK rather than comply with backdoor mandate
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Apple turns off data protection in the UK rather than comply with backdoor mandate
Author: news@appleinsider.com (William Gallagher)
Published: Feb, 21 2025 15:33

UK Parliament. Last updated 10 hours ago. Rather than comply with a UK order to make a backdoor into encrypted data, Apple has announced it will no longer offer Advanced Data Protection in that country. In 2024, the UK revamped its UK Investigatory Powers Act of 2016 to give itself the authority to legally — and secretly — compel Apple to break the end-to-end encryption that its security and privacy depends on. Despite bipartisan protests from the US, the UK issued the order and Apple cannot continue to operate its end-to-end encryption without breaking the law.

Instead of allowing the UK backdoor access to encrypted data, however, Apple has announced that it is switching off the encryption. This technically complies with the law, but means Apple does not create a backdoor that the UK or other bad actors could use.

We are gravely disappointed that the protections provided by ADP will not be available to our customers in the UK given the continuing rise of data breaches and other threats to customer privacy. Enhancing the security of cloud storage with end-to-end encryption is more urgent than ever before.

Apple remains committed to offering our users the highest level of security for their personal data and are hopeful that we will be able to do so in the future in the United Kingdom. As we have said many times before, we have never built a backdoor or master key to any of our products or services and we never will.

This does not mean that all iCloud services are to lose their encryption within the UK. Apple says that iCloud Keychain and Health, for instance, plus iMessage and FaceTime, will remain end-to-end encrypted. However, certain other iCloud services will lose their encryption for users in the UK:.

The changes are effective immediately for new users, who will not be able to enable encryption on these services. Existing users will have an as yet unspecified period of time before encryption must be disabled. Apple notes that it can't disable the Advanced Data Protection for users itself. Instead, users will have to manually disable the feature in order to keep using iCloud.

The company says that instructions on how to do this will be provided shortly. Apple also notes that Advanced Data Protection will continue to be available everywhere else in the world. It is conceivable that Apple will ultimately be able to reverse this and reintroduce encryption for the UK, but even if it does happen, it's not known how long that will take.

The reason is that as well as making its demands in secret, the UK government has a unique answer to appeals. Apple can appeal to a UK technical court against the government's demands, but it cannot wait for the result to comply with the order. Ultimately, the UK has got what it wanted. The original demand was for a backdoor that would allow it access to the data of any iCloud user anywhere in the world.

Given that Apple has previously gone to court to refuse the same request from the FBI, it was never going to capitulate to the UK. But to stay within the law, it had to remove the encryption for the UK. Which means that UK has the unencrypted access it wanted for its own citizens — who have not been consulted on this.

William Gallagher has 30 years of experience between the BBC and AppleInsider discussing Apple technology. Outside of AppleInsider, he's best known for writing Doctor Who radio dramas for BBC/Big Finish, and is the De... The first developer beta of iOS 18.4 features significant changes to Apple Intelligence and Apple News+. Here's what you need to know.

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