Comment by EagnaIonat
1 month ago
> People simply don't want their device's default state to be "silently working against you
That was the misconception of what was happening though.
Nothing happens on your device. Only when it gets to the cloud. It just puts a flag on the picture in question to have the cloud scan it.
Which is exactly what happens before Apple suggested it and happens now. Except it does it for all your files.
> One also can't make the moral argument that the "bad content" list only included CSAM material, as that list was deliberately made opaque. It was a "just trust me bro" situation.
CSAM database is run by Interpol. What evidence do you have that they are not being honest?
The scanning and matching is performed on your own device, against a copy of the databases which is encrypted to protect apple and their data providers against accountability for its content. The result of that match is itself encrypted, owing to the fact that the database is encrypted. On upload the query is decrypted and if there are above a threshold matches the decryption keys to all your content are revealed to apple.
Your phone is your most trusted agent-- it's a mandatory part of your life that mediates your interactions with friends, family, lovers, the government, your doctors, your lawyers, and your priest. You share with it secrets you would tell no other person. It's always with you, tracking your location and recording your activities. And in many cases its use is practically mandated. I think it's inappropriate for such a device to serve any interest except your own.
While it is true that the original proposal operated only on images that you would upload to icloud many people assumed the functionality would be applied more widely over time. This article seems to have proved that point: Apple is now applying essentially the same scanning technology (this time they claim the databases is of "landmarks") to otherwise entirely local photos.
> Your phone is your most trusted agent
What makes you think your phone is the most trusted device? Do you know everything that is running on your phone and what it does?
If a government wanted to enforce it then none of what Apple suggested mattered.
In fact they wouldn't even need to release a paper explaining what they planned to do.
This has been the fallacy against the whole argument.
My message was an informal argument. Apple has proposed and (now) applied the same spyware technology to their desktop/laptop operating system as well. But for most people in the US their phone absolute does occupy that most-trusted niche. For better or worse. The fact that this trust may currently be ill-advised is all the more reason people should demand change that makes it possible.
> If a government wanted to enforce it then none of what Apple suggested mattered.
Perhaps you live in a dicatorship. If so, I'm sorry. In the united states the power of the government is limited by the constitution. The kind of automated surveillance performed nominally 'consensually' via corporations would be unambiguously unlawful for the government to perform.