Apple has made headlines by pulling its most advanced data security tool for UK customers. It is removing Advanced Data Protection (ADP) after the Home Office asked for the right to be able to access ...
Apple has confirmed it is withdrawing a key data protection feature following the government's demands to access the data but what does that mean for you? Advanced Data Protection (ADP ...
With data becoming one of the most valuable assets, protecting it is not just a legal obligation but a business imperative.
Advanced Data Protection (ADP), is an opt-in tool on Apple’s iCloud service which meant only an account holder could access the “majority” of file types such as photos or notes, as they were ...
Advanced Data Protection, which is opt-in, provides end-to-end encryption for 10 additional iCloud data categories like Photos, Notes, and Reminders, meaning that Apple no longer possesses the ...
you need to turn on Advanced Data Protection (ADP)— but that's no longer going to be an option in the UK. Apple is pulling ADP from the country, reportedly following a request from the UK ...
President Donald Trump, through executive action, has given the Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE, a broad mandate ...
When it comes to the fundamentals of security, I think that on this Big Tech (eg, Apple) is right and Big Gov (eg, the UK) is wrong.
It is removing Advanced Data Protection (ADP) after the Home Office asked for the right to be able to access data which it is applied to - something even Apple itself cannot currently do.
Apple will no longer offer its Advanced Data Protection (ADP) iCloud feature in the UK—what does this mean, and why is it controversial?