Kuwait Times

Apple to open data center in China with government ties

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SAN FRANCISCO: Apple will open a data center in mainland China with ties to the country’s government, raising concerns about the security of iCloud accounts that store personal informatio­n transferre­d from iPhones, iPads and Mac computers there.

The data center announced Wednesday will be located in the Guizhou province and run by a company owned by the Chinese government. Apple is teaming up with the company, Guizhou on the Cloud Big Data, to comply with a new Chinese law requiring data-storage providers to keep the informatio­n of mainland China customers on computers located within the country.

The Guizhou data center will store photos, video, documents and other personal informatio­n uploaded to iCloud accounts by Apple customers who live in mainland China, even when they’re traveling outside the country. Backups and other data stored in iCloud accounts by customers outside China will continue to be stored in data centers in the US and eventually Denmark.

Other major technology companies, including Amazon, Microsoft, and IBM, have already made similar deals to run data centers in mainland China to remain in the good graces of the country’s Communist government.

But Apple’s acquiescen­ce is striking because CEO Tim Cook has made preserving customers’ privacy a company cornerston­e. The Cupertino, California, company underscore­d that commitment last year in a highprofil­e battle with the US government over a legal demand to crack open the iPhone of a suspected killer in a mass shooting.

Apple has a strong incentive to toe the line in China because that country already is its third-largest market behind North America and Europe, with all signs pointing to it become an even bigger profit center. China currently accounts for about 20 percent of Apple’s revenue.

Even though it’s working with a government-owned company, Apple sought to reassure customers in China that the arrangemen­t won’t compromise their privacy. “As our customers know, Apple has strong data privacy and security protection­s in place and no backdoors will be created into any of our systems,” the company said in a statement.

What’s more, Apple says it will hold to the security keys protecting the data that people routinely back up in iCloud accounts. But experts believe the data center will make it easier for the government to retrieve the informatio­n through legal demands or other means. Apple will find it more challengin­g to resist any order from a Chinese court to give authoritie­s there access to an iCloud account that they want to sift through, predicted Nate Cardozo, a senior staff attorney specializi­ng in privacy for the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a digital rights group. Currently, the Chinese government has to funnel those demands through the US court system, a more difficult process to negotiate.

Cardozo recommends that Apple customers in mainland customer turn off the iCloud feature on their iPhones and other devices to protect their informatio­n from prying eyes. Data stored on the devices themselves should remain secure as long as they lock them with passwords that only the user knows. Even if the government seizes a device, Apple won’t have the keys to unlock data. But with iCloud, Apple does have the keys. The exception is passwords and credit card data synced with iCloud Keychain.

Ajay Arora, CEO of data security specialist Vera, also warns that Apple’s partnershi­p with a company owned by the Chinese government increases the chances that authoritie­s could secretly pry their way into iCloud accounts.

“It’s like Apple is putting the fox in charge of the henhouse,” Arora said. —AP

 ??  ?? BEIJING: In this Friday, May 13, 2016, file photo, a man uses his mobile phone near an Apple store in Beijing. Apple recently announced it will open a data center in mainland China with ties to the country’s government, raising concerns about the...
BEIJING: In this Friday, May 13, 2016, file photo, a man uses his mobile phone near an Apple store in Beijing. Apple recently announced it will open a data center in mainland China with ties to the country’s government, raising concerns about the...

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