UK Court Rejects Government Secrecy in Apple's Fight Against Backdoor RequestApple has filed a legal appeal against a UK government order requiring the company to create a "back door" to its encrypted cloud storage systems, the Investigatory Powers Tribunal (IPT) confirmed on Monday (via
Reuters). The confirmation means that the Home Office cannot keep all the details of its demand out of the public domain.

The high-profile challenge follows reports earlier this year that the UK used its Investigatory Powers Act to
demand secret access to encrypted user data uploaded to iCloud worldwide. Apple responded by
removing its Advanced Data Protection feature from the UK rather than compromising its security standards.
According to the IPT ruling, the British government had sought to keep details of the case private. The Home Office argued that publicizing the existence of the appeal could damage national security, but Judges Rabinder Singh and Jeremy Johnson rejected this claim.
"It would have been a truly extraordinary step to conduct a hearing entirely in secret without any public revelation of the fact that a hearing was taking place," the judges wrote in their decision. "For the reasons that are set out in our private judgement, we do not accept that the revelation of the bare details of the case would be damaging to the public interest or prejudicial to national security."
Monday's ruling follows a hearing in London in March, which was held in secret.
Apple previously
made it clear that it would pull iCloud features from the UK rather than compromise its user security, and while that only extends to Advanced Data Protection right now, it could lead to key features like FaceTime and iMessage being removed in the country. The UK wants backdoor access to iCloud data to fight terrorism and investigate child sex abuse.
The UK's order was particularly controversial as it would have required Apple to provide access to data from users outside the UK without their governments' knowledge. Additionally, the IPA makes it illegal for companies to disclose the existence of such government demands.
The US government is reportedly
investigating whether the UK's demand violates the CLOUD Act, which prevents the UK from requesting data from US citizens.<div class="linkback">Tags:
Apple Privacy,
Apple Security,
Encryption,
United Kingdom</div>
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UK Court Rejects Government Secrecy in Apple's Fight Against Backdoor Request