This week, the U.S. sanctioned the Nemesis admin, Poco RAT spotted in Latin America, Apple challenged a British order to weaken encryption and the FBI warned
Plus, why Microsoft and Google don’t have to comply with the UK encryption issue that Apple does, and a computer mouse that smells nice. Starring Tom Merritt and Rob Dunewood. Follow us on
Apple on February 21 withdrew its Advanced Data Protection feature from the United Kingdom following government demands for backdoor access
Trump criticizes UK for demanding backdoor into Apple's encrypted cloud storage, compares move to China's authoritarian surveillance tactics.
From Parmy Olson's "Apple’s UK Privacy Fight Is Noble But Shortsighted" posted Wednesday by Bloomberg.
The United Kingdom dealt a significant blow in its war on encryption last week that, aside from blemishing Apple’s meticulously curated privacy commitments, could have worldwide ramifications for personal data protections.
With Apple removing its best iPhone security feature rather than submitting to misjudged government demands, it’s clear the long-running encryption debate will fire up again. And while on the surface this looks like a simply battle between law enforcement and big tech,
Apple had removed its most advanced security encryption for cloud data in Britain, in an unprecedented response to government demands for access to user data. The change affected a feature called Advanced Data Protection,
This week’s Apple headlines; iPhone 17 Fold leaks, M4 MacBook Air launch, iPad Air upgrade, Brazil forces sideloading iOS apps, Gemini AI, the spring colours are here, and
The UK is no longer recommending the use of encryption for at-risk groups following its iCloud backdoor demands