Audio By Carbonatix
More than 90 policy and rights groups around the world have published an open letter urging Apple to abandon plans for scanning children’s messages for nudity and the phones of adults for images of child sex abuse.
“Though these capabilities are intended to protect children and to reduce the spread of child sexual abuse material, we are concerned that they will be used to censor protected speech, threaten the privacy and security of people around the world, and have disastrous consequences for many children,” the groups wrote in the letter, according to a Reuters news agency report on Thursday.
The largest campaign to date over an encryption issue at a single company was organised by the United States-based nonprofit Center for Democracy and Technology (CDT).
Some overseas signatories in particular are worried about the effect of the changes in nations with different legal systems, including some already hosting heated fights over encryption and privacy.
“It’s so disappointing and upsetting that Apple is doing this, because they have been a staunch ally in defending encryption in the past,” said Sharon Bradford Franklin, co-director of CDT’s Security & Surveillance Project.
An Apple spokesman said the company had addressed privacy and security concerns in a document last week, outlining why the complex architecture of the scanning software should resist attempts to subvert it.
Those signing included multiple groups in Brazil, where courts have repeatedly blocked Facebook’s WhatsApp for failing to decrypt messages in criminal probes, and the Senate has passed a bill that would require traceability of messages, which would require somehow marking their content.
A similar law was passed in India this year.
“Our main concern is the consequence of this mechanism, how this could be extended to other situations and other companies,” said Flavio Wagner, president of the independent Brazil chapter of the Internet Society, which is one of the signatories of the letter.
“This represents a serious weakening of encryption.”
Other signers were in India, Mexico, Germany, Argentina, Ghana and Tanzania.
The signers said the step could endanger children in intolerant homes or those seeking educational material. More broadly, they said the change will break end-to-end encryption for iMessage, which Apple has staunchly defended in other contexts.
“Once this backdoor feature is built in, governments could compel Apple to extend notification to other accounts, and to detect images that are objectionable for reasons other than being sexually explicit,” the letter says.
Other groups that signed include the American Civil Liberties Union, Electronic Frontier Foundation, Access Now, Privacy International and the Tor Project.
Latest Stories
-
Why the State must appeal Agradaa’s sentence reduction – Prof. Asare lists 5 reasons
1 hour -
IGP Special Operations Team arrests suspect in possession of illegal arms and police gear
2 hours -
Journalism must be a tool for development, not destruction — Sports Minister to AIPS
2 hours -
Interior Ministry urges honest self-assessment, strategic alignment at 2025 performance review workshop
3 hours -
InfoAnalytics predicts victory for Hajia Amina in Ayawaso East NDC Primary
3 hours -
Awakening road safety consciousness: Why passengers must be searched before boarding buses in Ghana
3 hours -
She Captures Humanity: A Humanitarian photography and social impact initiative
3 hours -
Ghanaian Swimming prodigy Yamin Amankwah Boamah sets 10 new PBs
4 hours -
Superstition Meets Real Harm: Witchcraft accusations, social injustice and weak protections in Northern Ghana
4 hours -
Nkrumahism, Mahama, and Africa’s unfinished cultural liberation
4 hours -
Group withdraws petition against unlicensed GoldBod actor, cites court proceedings
4 hours -
Threads of state: When cotton started a diplomatic incident
5 hours -
Dozens of MPs don smocks in cultural solidarity amid Ghana-Zambia ‘fugu’ controversy
5 hours -
AMA reclaims abandoned Alajo–Avenor open space in Accra; unveils green, beautification agenda
5 hours -
Trump removes video with racist clip depicting Obamas as apes
5 hours
