
Google won't say if UK secretly demanded a backdoor for user data
But one U.S. senator wants to know if other tech giants, like Google, have also received secret backdoor demands from the U.K. government, and Google has so far refused to say.
Earlier this year, The Washington Post reported that the U.K. Home Office sought a secret court order in the U.K.'s surveillance court demanding that Apple allows U.K. authorities to access the end-to-end encrypted cloud data stored on any customer in the world, including their iPhone and iPad backups. Apple encrypts the data in such a way that only customers, and not Apple, can access their data stored on its servers.
Under U.K. law, tech companies subject to secret surveillance court orders, such as Apple, are legally barred from revealing details of an order, or the existence of the order itself, despite details of the demand publicly leaking earlier this year. Critics called the secret order against Apple 'draconian,' saying it would have global ramifications for users' privacy. Apple has since appealed the legality of the order.
In a new letter sent to top U.S. intelligence official Tulsi Gabbard on Tuesday, Sen. Ron Wyden, who serves on the Senate Intelligence Committee, said that while tech companies cannot say whether they have received a U.K. order, at least one technology giant has confirmed that it hasn't received one.
Meta, which uses end-to-end encryption to protect user messages sent between WhatsApp and Facebook Messenger, told Wyden's office on March 17 that the company has 'not received an order to backdoor our encrypted services, like that reported about Apple.'
Google, for its part, has refused to tell Wyden's office if it had received a U.K. government order for accessing encrypted data, such as Android backups, 'only stating that if it had received a technical capabilities notice, it would be prohibited from disclosing that fact,' Wyden said.
Google spokesperson Karl Ryan told TechCrunch in a statement: 'We have never built any mechanism or 'backdoor' to circumvent end-to-end encryption in our products. If we say a product is end-to-end encrypted, it is.'
When explicitly asked by TechCrunch, Google would not say whether or not it has to date received an order from the U.K. government.
Wyden's letter, first reported by The Washington Post and shared with TechCrunch, called on Gabbard to make public its 'assessment of the national security risks posed by the U.K.'s surveillance laws and its reported secret demands of U.S. companies.'
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