REUTERS/Mike Segar. |
Britain last week unveiled a draft surveillance bill that would place explicit obligations on service providers to help intercept data and hack suspects' devices, potentially undermining the end-to-end encryption on Apple's iMessages.
Speaking to students in Dublin, Tim Cook said Apple would need to create a "back door" in the encryption to comply and that this would expose data to hackers.
"If you leave a back door in the software, there is no such thing as a back door for good guys only," Cook said. "If there is a back door, anyone can come in the back door."
"We believe that the safest approach for the world is to encrypt end to end with no back door. We think that protects the most people," he said
By Conor Humphries.
Full story at Yahoo News.
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