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Apple beefs up iCloud data defense against snooping

AFP
San Francisco, United States
Thu, December 8, 2022

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Apple beefs up iCloud data defense against snooping Upping security: The tech giant’s iconic logo adorns the frontispiece of an Apple store in Washington, DC, in this photograph taken on Sept. 14, 2021. Apple said on Wednesday it would expand end-to-end encryption to protect users’ data stored in the cloud. (AFP/Nicholas Kamm)

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pple said on Wednesday it was beefing up security for data that users stored in the cloud, a move that could thwart authorities as well as hackers.

The iPhone maker’s Advanced Data Protection plan extends end-to-end encryption beyond its iMessage service to photos and other data backed up to its iCloud storage service.

Apple said the move was urgent, given the alarming increase in data breaches that had seen 1.1 billion personal records exposed across the globe in 2021, according to its research.

“Advanced Data Protection is Apple’s highest level of cloud data security,” said Ivan Krstić, Apple’s head of security engineering and architecture.

It gave “users the choice to protect the vast majority of their most sensitive iCloud data with end-to-end encryption, so that it can only be decrypted on their trusted devices”, he added.

Apple told The Wall Street Journal that with the heightened security, it would no longer be able to hand over iMessage history and other files, even when legally requested to do so by investigators.

The move will potentially rekindle a long period of standoffs involving technology firms and law enforcement.

Apple notably resisted a legal effort to weaken iPhone encryption to allow authorities to read messages from a suspect in a 2015 bombing case in San Bernardino, California.

Police officials worldwide say encryption can protect criminals, terrorists and pornographers, even when authorities have a legal warrant for an investigation.

Civil rights and privacy advocates, along with cybersecurity professionals, however, advocate encrypting data to protect against wrongful snooping by authorities as well as hackers.

“We constantly identify and mitigate emerging threats to personal data on devices and in the cloud,” Apple senior vice president of software engineering Craig Federighi said in a post.

Under the new setting, Apple said only iCloud Mail, Contacts and Calendar would remain unencrypted because of the need to operate with other systems.

The new level of security would be available in the United States by the end of this month and rolled out globally next year, Apple said.

Apple has championed data privacy as a way to differentiate itself from tech giants Meta and Google, which closely track users’ online activity to boost advertising revenue.

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