• @TheYang@lemmy.world
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      121 year ago

      They moved the storage of encryption keys for Chinese users to servers in China instead of shutting down iMessage and Facetime. Quite the different response compared to here.

      I was assuming Apple was posturing until they’d actually have to do something.
      They could well have postured in China as well, before backtracking. I have no Idea if that happened, but it seems reasonable from a PR vs Legal vs business development standpoint.

    • kirklennon
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      1 year ago

      They moved the storage of encryption keys for Chinese users to servers in China instead of shutting down iMessage and Facetime.

      These are totally separate things. Apple users in China can still use iMessage and FaceTime and those are still end-to-end encrypted. If you choose to store your iMessages in iCloud, those can be accessed by the government, but that’s the same as they can in every other country. The UK’s proposal is to directly break the security of iMessage itself, something worse than what China has done.

    • @abhibeckert@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      They moved the storage of encryption keys for Chinese users to servers in China

      No they didn’t. iMessage can only be decrypted by keys stored in the secure enclave on your device.

      There are some things that the Chinese government can access. The contents of messages isn’t one of them.

      And as for Facetime… those calls aren’t recorded at all. Not sure how a legal order is supposed to allow access to data that doesn’t even exist.

      • @JiveTurkey@lemmy.world
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        11 year ago

        I agree that’s not how it works in most places but I don’t assume to know the inner working of a Chinese iphone or the version of iOS it’s running. If there is a financial incentive apple will bend for China while also saying it didn’t.