San Francisco Chronicle

Cook to resist Britain’s spy law plan

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DUBLIN, Ireland — Tech giant Apple will resist the British government’s efforts to get access to encrypted data through a new spying law, CEO Tim Cook said Wednesday.

Last week, Britain published a draft law that seeks to ensure that telecommun­ication companies “provide wider assistance to law enforcemen­t and the security and intelligen­ce agencies in the interests of national security.”

That worries firms like Apple, whose iMessage service offers “endto-end” encryption, meaning the company doesn’t have the ability to read messages sent over the app.

Cook told students at Trinity College Dublin that Apple does not plan to introduce a “back door” ability to decrypt the messages.

“We will productive­ly work with the government­s to try to convince them that’s also in their best interests, in the national security sense,” he said.

Cook said weakening encryption would be bad for online security, because “if you leave a back door in the software, then there’s no such thing as a back door for the good guys only.”

“If there’s a back door, anybody can come in,” he said.

British Home Secretary Theresa May said last week that the draft Investigat­ory Powers Bill “will not ban encryption or do anything to undermine the security of people’s data.”

But civil liberties and privacy groups have expressed alarm at its provisions, which include requiring communicat­ions companies to hold onto customers’ Web traffic records for up to a year. The draft bill also says that service providers will be legally obliged to assist the authoritie­s in getting access to customers’ devices.

The bill has yet to be approved by Parliament.

 ?? Luca Bruno / Associated Press ?? Apple’s Tim Cook says creating a back door just for good guys is impossible.
Luca Bruno / Associated Press Apple’s Tim Cook says creating a back door just for good guys is impossible.

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