Macworld With all the marketing Apple does around privacy, and all the talk lately of government surveillance around the ...
The purported Apple backdoor request, which the UK government declined to confirm to The Register, would reportedly allow ...
Are you losing your mind waiting for photos, emails, and other data to transfer between your iPhone, iPad, and Mac? Take ...
Security experts say the ‘draconian’ order would have global ramifications that make this a privacy ‘emergency for us all’ ...
Apple’s excellent Advanced Data Protection (APD) is central to this new furor. This applies end-to-end encryption to almost all the sensitive data on your iPhone, including your iCloud drive, photos, ...
Ron Wyden and Andy Biggs wrote to the US Director of National Intelligence urging her to demand the UK retract a data access ...
A secret order would compel Apple to build a back door into its most secure iCloud backup option, The Washington Post reports ...
The British government has secretly demanded that Apple give it blanket access to all encrypted user content uploaded to the ...
including iCloud Backup, Photos, Notes, and more. Apple's use of end-to-end encryption means the vast majority of your most sensitive iCloud data can only be decrypted on your trusted Apple ...
Not only is Apple unable to either confirm or deny that it has been told to create this back door, but the UK Home Office ...
The secret order would give the UK access to encrypted backups belonging to any user — not just Brits.
The UK government demanded Apple create a back door on users' encrypted iCloud accounts to retrieve the content any user ...