Apple drops encryption feature for UK users after government reportedly
demanded backdoor access
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[February 22, 2025] By
KELVIN CHAN
LONDON (AP) — Apple said Friday it will stop offering an advanced data
security option for British users after the government reportedly
demanded that the company provide backdoor access for any data those
users have stored in the cloud.
The iPhone maker said its Advanced Data Protection encryption feature is
no longer available for new users in the United Kingdom and will
eventually be disabled for existing users.
Advanced Data Protection, which Apple started rolling out at the end of
2022, is an opt-in feature that protects iCloud files, photos, notes and
other data with end-to-end encryption when they're stored in the cloud.
British security officials demanded in a secret order that the U.S. tech
giant create so-called backdoor access so that they could view fully
encrypted material, The Washington Post reported earlier this month,
citing anonymous sources.
Apple “can no longer offer Advanced Data Protection” in the U.K., the
company said in a statement.
“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,” Apple said,
without referring to the government demand.
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The Washington Post report said the British government served Apple with
what's known as a “technical capability notice" ordering it to provide
the access under a sweeping law called the Investigatory Powers Act of
2016, which has been dubbed the snoopers' charter.
The law officially gives British spies the ability to hack into devices
and harvest vast amounts of bulk online data, much of it from outside
the U.K. It contains provisions to compel companies to remove encryption
to allow for electronic eavesdropping, while making it a criminal
offense to reveal that the government has issued such demands.
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An Apple logo adorns the facade of the downtown Brooklyn Apple store
on March 14, 2020, in New York. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens, File)
 “We do not comment on operational
matters, including for example confirming or denying the existence
of any such notices," the U.K. Home Office said in a brief
statement.
Apple did not reveal how many users in Britain have been using
Advanced Data Protection. It said the feature would still be
available to users in the rest of the world.
Some types of data will still be end-to-end encrypted in the U.K. by
default, Apple said, including passwords on the iCloud Keychain,
information on the Health app, and communications on services
including iMessage and FaceTime.
End-to-end encryption means that messages are scrambled so that only
the sender and recipient can see them. If anyone else intercepts the
message, all they will see is a garble that can’t be unscrambled
without the key.
The episode illustrates “one of the fundamental flaws in government
efforts to undermine encryption," said Mike Chapple, an IT professor
at the University of Notre Dame’s Mendoza College of Business. Faced
with having to choose between security and complying with government
regulations, companies like Apple tend to remove security features
entirely, said Chapple, a former computer scientist at the National
Security Agency.
“The net effect is reduced security for everyone. If other
governments follow the UK’s lead, we risk a future where strong
encryption is functionally outlawed, which puts all of us at risk
not just to government surveillance but also to eavesdropping by
other bad actors.”
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