Everyone in the tech industry facepalms almost every time legislators try to pontificate on technology, but the British government appears to be trying to set a new record. After putting iMessage and FaceTime at risk, the government is now suggesting that it might ban some Apple security updates.

  • amzd
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    611 year ago

    Ok so Apple would have to disclose the vulnerability to follow proposed EU rules then can’t implement the fix in UK? That seems like a disaster waiting to happen

    • LeTak
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      491 year ago

      Imagine Apple shares a patch and the UK does not approve the install. Ok nice. Now everyone knows a vulnerability that affects most of the Apple devices in UK. What could go wrong.

      • @pivot_root@lemmy.world
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        201 year ago

        Next step: require all security patches to be submitted to the UK government for review before disclosing it to any other government or to the public.

          • KSP Atlas
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            51 year ago

            As someone in the uk, please have them do so the uk learns its lesson

          • @Honytawk@lemmy.zip
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            41 year ago

            Yes, pulling out of the UK is on the tables now.

            See, one of the amazing parts of the EU is the capability of collective bargaining.

            If the UK was still in the EU, then any company looking to pull out of the UK because of laws would cause the EU to ban the company in every other country until they comply.

            A company would essentially need to pull out of the entire EU in those instances, and with their 700 million rich inhabitants, that is one huge market to leave.

            But leaving a 70 million market isn’t that big of a deal.