Remote tech support and Onsite Tech support for PC and Mac Support from A Geek To Go

Privacy At The Cost Of Security For iPhone Owners

Miles West • Aug 30, 2021

Newest iPhone update will have full access to your photos, posing a major privacy security issue.

Click Here

NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden has issued a chilling warning about Apple's new plans to begin scanning iPhone iCloud photos of users, saying the proposal will give governments terrifying access to citizen's private data.


Snowden, a former computer intelligence consultant, who in 2013 leaked classified documents to show the scale of government snooping on U.S. citizens, condemned the new plans in strong terms, and says they set a precedent which will ultimately be abused by corrupt politicians to destroy individual privacy. 


He said that Apple had chosen a dangerous path with their scheme to access users' photos, and that governments will manipulate the rule to give them greater access to data they claim they need access to - such as a phone owner's presence at a protest. 

The Silicon Valley giant will scan all photos linked from iPhones to the Cloud for child pornography - with images cross-checked against a database from the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children.


Apple says that any users who do not want their phones to be scanned can switch off the linkage to the Cloud. But many people do not realize their phones are syncing with the Cloud - and Snowden said 85% of iPhone users have their phones set up to sync to the Cloud.


He also warned that Apple's initial opt-out will inevitably be axed if its plans go ahead, meaning people's phones will ultimately be the property of corporations and governments, and used to spy on their owners. 

The update was announced at the beginning of this month, and Apple said the latest changes will roll out this year as part of updates to its operating software for iPhones, Macs and Apple Watches.


Apple was one of the first major companies to embrace 'end-to-end' encryption, in which messages are scrambled so that only their senders and recipients can read them. Law enforcement, however, has long pressured the company for access to that information in order to investigate crimes such as terrorism or child sexual exploitation. 


Snowden, 38, who has lived in Russia since leaking the classified information, said that Apple was opening Pandora's Box. 

'If Apple demonstrates the capability and willingness to continuously, remotely search every phone for evidence of one particular type of crime, these are questions for which they will have no answer,' he warned. 'And yet an answer will come - and it will come from the worst lawmakers of the worst governments.   


'This is not a slippery slope. It's a cliff.'


Snowden said that Apple's proposal would make it simple for governments to clamp down on their citizens.

'What happens when a party in India demands they start scanning for memes associated with a separatist movement?' he wrote, on his Substack newsletter. 


'What happens when the US demands they scan for a library of terrorist imagery?


'How long do we have left before the iPhone in your pocket begins quietly filing reports about encountering 'extremist' political material, or about your presence at a 'civil disturbance'?'


Snowden said that Apple was setting out 'to erase the boundary dividing which devices work for you, and which devices work for them.'

He added: 'Once the precedent has been set that it is fit and proper for even a 'pro-privacy' company like Apple to make products that betray their users and owners, Apple itself will lose all control over how that precedent is applied.​​'​ 


He pointed out that pedophiles would immediately disable the settings, which showed that rooting out sex offenders was not the real purpose of the new scheme.


'As long as you keep that material off their servers, and so keep Apple out of the headlines, Apple doesn't care,' he said. 


'Apple's new system, regardless of how anyone tries to justify it, will permanently redefine what belongs to you, and what belongs to them.'





Contact us today to learn more and sign up. Call 1-90-GeekToGo 772-675-5774 or reach us online.





You might also like

Latest Tech Support News

By Miles West 28 Nov, 2023
Managing Your Digital Legacy and Protecting Your Data
By Miles West 14 May, 2022
Why should I choose an online tech support company?
By Miles West 13 Jan, 2022
Microsoft introduces new woke feature for Word
More Posts

Book a Service Today

Share by: