The Mercury News

Sources claim Apple dropped plan for encrypting backups after FBI complained

Tech giant apparently quietly changed policy two years ago

- By Joseph Menn Reuters

SAN FRANCISCO » Apple dropped plans to let iPhone users fully encrypt backups of their devices in the company’s iCloud service after the FBI complained that the move would harm investigat­ions, six sources familiar with the matter told Reuters.

The tech giant’s reversal, about two years ago, has not previously been reported. It shows how much Apple has been willing to help U.S. law enforcemen­t and intelligen­ce agencies, despite taking a harder line in high-profile legal disputes with the government and casting itself as a defender of its customers’ informatio­n.

The long-running tug of war between investigat­ors’ concerns about security and tech companies’ desire for user privacy moved back into the public spotlight last week, as U.S. Attorney General William Barr took the rare step of publicly calling on Apple to unlock two iPhones used by a Saudi Air Force officer who shot dead three Americans at a Pensacola, Florida naval base last month.

U.S. President Donald Trump piled on, accusing Apple on Twitter of refusing to unlock phones used by “killers, drug dealers and other violent criminal elements.” Republican and Democratic senators sounded a similar theme in a December hearing, threatenin­g legislatio­n against end-to-end encryption, citing unrecovera­ble evidence of crimes against children.

Apple did in fact did turn over the shooter’s iCloud backups in the Pensacola case, and said it rejected the characteri­zation that it “has not provided substantiv­e assistance.”

Behind the scenes, Apple has provided the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion with more sweeping help, not related to any specific probe.

An Apple spokesman declined to com

ment on the company’s handling of the encryption issue or any discussion­s it has had with the FBI. The FBI did not respond to requests for comment on any discussion­s with Apple.

More than two years ago, Apple told the FBI that it planned to offer users endto-end encryption when storing their phone data on iCloud, according to one current and three former FBI officials and one current and one former Apple employee.

Under that plan, primarily designed to thwart hackers, Apple would no longer have a key to unlock the encrypted data, meaning it would not be able to turn material over to authoritie­s in a readable form even under court order.

In private talks with Apple soon after, representa­tives of the FBI’s cyber crime agents and its operationa­l technology division objected to the plan, arguing it would deny them the most effective means for gaining evidence against iPhone-using suspects, the

government sources said.

When Apple spoke privately to the FBI about its work on phone security the following year, the end-toend encryption plan had been dropped, according to the six sources. Reuters could not determine why exactly Apple dropped the plan.

“Legal killed it, for reasons you can imagine,” another former Apple employee said he was told, without any specific mention of why the plan was dropped or if the FBI was a factor in the decision.

That person told Reuters the company did not want to risk being attacked by public officials for protecting criminals, sued for moving previously accessible data out of reach of government agencies or used as an excuse for new legislatio­n against encryption.

“They decided they weren’t going to poke the bear anymore,” the person said, referring to Apple’s court battle with the FBI in 2016 over access to an iPhone used by one of the suspects in a mass shooting in San Bernardino, California.

Apple appealed a court order to break into that phone for the FBI. The government dropped the proceeding­s when it found a contractor that could break into the phone, a common occurrence in FBI investigat­ions.

Two of the former FBI officials, who were not present in talks with Apple, told Reuters it appeared that the FBI’s arguments that the backups provided vital evidence in thousands of cases had prevailed.

However, a former Apple employee said it was possible the encryption project was dropped for other reasons, such as concern that more customers would find themselves locked out of their data more often.

Once the decision was made, the 10 or so experts on the Apple encryption project — variously codenamed Plesio and KeyDrop — were told to stop working on the effort, three people familiar with the matter told Reuters.

Apple’s decision not to proceed with end-to-end encryption of iCloud backups made the FBI’s job easier.

Apple’s iCloud, on the other hand, can be searched in secret. In the first half of last year, the period covered by Apple’s most recent semiannual transparen­cy report on requests for data it receives from government agencies, U.S. authoritie­s armed with regular court papers asked for and obtained full device backups or other iCloud content in 1,568 cases, covering about 6,000 accounts.

The company said it turned over at least some data for 90% of the requests it received. It turns over data more often in response to secret U.S. intelligen­ce court directives, topping 14,000 accounts in the second half of 2018. Because of gag orders, Apple has not given any such data for 2019.

Had it proceeded with its plan, Apple would not have been able to turn over any readable data belonging to users who opted for end-to-end encryption.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVES ?? Apple seems to have dropped an encryption program over FBI concerns.
ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVES Apple seems to have dropped an encryption program over FBI concerns.

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