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UK secretly orders Apple to let it spy on iPhone users worldwide
The UK governments request for backdoor access to encrypted data is not necessarily about creating a surveillance state but rather about ensuring law enforcement can access critical information in serious cases, such as terrorism, child exploitation, and organised crime. With encryption making it harder to investigate criminal activity, a controlled backdoor could allow authorities to act swiftly in emergencies, preventing attacks or saving lives. Other intelligence agencies already conduct mass surveillance, so formalising a legal mechanism for targeted access could add accountability.
However, creating a backdoor, even for government use, weakens encryption for everyone. Once a vulnerability exists, it could be exploited by cybercriminals, hostile foreign states, or even rogue officials. Theres also the issue of government overreach historically, surveillance powers have been expanded beyond their original purpose, raising concerns about abuse. Furthermore, if Apple is forced to comply in the UK, other governments, will demand the same, setting a precedent.
A potential compromise could involve strict oversight mechanisms, ensuring backdoor access is only used with court approval and in cases of national security threats. Rather than a universal backdoor, targeted decryption warrants for specific devices or cases may strike a better balance between security and privacy.