Apple delays plan to scan iPhones for child-abuse photos after backlash
BERKELEY, California — Apple has indefinitely delayed plans to scan iPhones in the U.S. for images of child sexual abuse following an outcry from security and privacy experts who warned the technology could be exploited for other surveillance purposes by hackers and intrusive governments.
The postponement, announced Friday, comes a month after Apple said it was getting ready to roll out a tool to detect known images of child sexual abuse. The tool would work by scanning files before they’re uploaded to its iCloud backup storage system. It also planned to introduce a separate tool to scan users’ encrypted messages for sexually explicit content.
Apple insisted its technology had been developed in a way that would protect the privacy of iPhone owners in the U.S.
But the Cupertino, California, company was swamped with criticism from security experts, human rights groups and customers worried that the scanning technology would open a peephole exposing personal and sensitive information.
“Based on feedback from customers, advocacy groups, researchers, and others, we have decided to take additional time over the coming months to collect input and make improvements before releasing these critically important child safety features,” Apple said in an update posted above its original photo-scanning plans.
Apple never set a specific date for when the scanning technology would roll out, beyond saying it would occur this year. The company is expected to unveil its next iPhone this month, but it’s unclear if it will use that to further discuss its change in plans for scanning the devices in the U.S.
The intense backlash to the scanning technology was particularly bruising for a company that has made personal privacy a marketing mantra.
Apple contends it is more trustworthy than other major technology companies such as Google and Facebook that vacuum up information about people’s interests and location to help sell digital ads. Apple CEO Tim Cook is known to repeat the catchphrase: “Privacy is a fundamental human right.”
The photo scanning technology was “a really big about-face for Apple,” said Cindy Cohn, executive director for the Electronic Frontier Foundation, one of the most vocal critics of the plans. “If you are going to take a stand for people’s privacy, you can’t be scanning their phones.”
Cohn applauded Apple for taking more time to reassess its plans and urged the company to talk to a broader range of experts than it apparently did while drawing up its scanning blueprint in its typically secretive fashion.
Matthew Green, a top cryptography researcher at Johns Hopkins University and another outspoken critic of Apple, also supported the delay. “You need to build support before you launch something like this,” Green said. “This was a big escalation from scanning almost nothing to scanning private files.”