Many consider Apple to be strong on user data privacy and security. Which is why their proposal to backdoor and scan all users’ iPhones has surprised and dismayed so many. Why are they doing this? Is backdoor access to your private files ever OK?
Daniel Markuson
Aug 10, 2021 · 3 min read
First, what do we mean by “backdoor” here? Apple wants to be able to scan the photo library of every single person using an iPhone. To view their photos and scan their contents or to compare them to databases of other images they have access to.
The reason they have provided for doing this certainly is noble. These Expanded Protections for Children are part of a toolset Apple wants to use to combat the abuse and sexual exploitation of children.
Specifically, the backdoor access would let Apple scan all users’ photos and compare them to a database of known images of child exploitation or sexual abuse. Matches would be reported to the national organizations responsible for monitoring these sorts of crimes.
So why is Apple receiving so much criticism for what seems like a good idea?
It is no accident that when backdoors are proposed, they are often first suggested as measures to combat the distribution of child pornography. Child abuse is an emotionally wrenching crime against the most vulnerable and innocent members of society. This is an important fight.
However, it can also be used as a Trojan horse – an attractive and righteous cause used as cover to achieve something more sinister. Here’s why critics fear this might be a way for surveillance advocates to get their foot in the door:
But let’s say you completely trust Apple and the government. And you also support the fight against all forms of child abuse (as we all should). There are still problems.
What’s more secure, a door or a wall? If you imagine encryption as a tunnel, a backdoor is the introduction of a door where there had previously been an impregnable (encrypted) wall. It introduces a vulnerability where one never existed and where, arguably, it shouldn’t.
From a long history of cybersecurity blunders (one of the largest and most recent being the SolarWinds hack), we know that government cybersecurity is far from watertight. How sure can you be that the government won’t ever lose the keys to that door in your tunnel if they’ve lost the keys to their own doors before?
We applaud Apple’s interest in assisting in the fight against child abuse. However, our fear is that a tool like this may do more damage than good. Apple is valued by many for valuing the security and privacy of their users (though they are far from perfect). Hopefully, they’ll continue to do so by reconsidering their interest in building backdoors for their products.
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