The Borneo Post

Amazon drops encryption feature in tablet software

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SEATTLE: Mammoth e-retailer Amazon Inc has quietly dropped support for disk encryption on its Fire tablets, saying the feature that secures devices by scrambling data was little used by customers.

Privacy advocates and some users loudly criticised the move, which came to light even as Apple Inc was waging an unpreceden­ted legal battle over US government demands that the iPhone maker help unlock an encrypted phone used by San Bernardino shooter Rizwan Farook.

On-device encryption scrambles data so that the device can only be accessed if the user enters the correct password.

Cryptologi­st Bruce Schneier said Amazon’s move to remove the feature was “stupid” and called on the company to restore it.

“Hopefully the market will tell them to do otherwise,” he said.

Amazon spokeswoma­n Robin Handaly said in an email that the company had removed the encryption feature for Fire tablets when it launched Fire OS 5, a new version of its tablet operating system.

“It was a feature few customers were actually using,” she said, adding that Fire tablets’ communicat­ion with the company’s cloud meets its “high standards for privacy and security including appropriat­e use of encryption.”

Encryption expert Dan Guido said that Amazon may have eliminated the feature to cut component costs for tablets that sell for as low as US$50 (RM210).

However, digital privacy advocates and customers said those arguments were not good enough reasons for discontinu­ing the security feature.

“Removing device encryption due to lack of customer use is an incredibly poor excuse for weakening the security of those customers that did use the feature,” said Jeremy Gillula, staff technologi­st with the Electronic Frontier Foundation. — Reuters

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