Comment by JumpCrisscross
21 hours ago
> One scenario would be somebody in an airport and security officials are searching your device
No Heathrow connection necessary. “The law has extraterritorial powers, meaning UK law enforcement would have been able to access the encrypted iCloud data of Apple customers anywhere in the world, including in the US” [1].
[1] https://www.ft.com/content/bc20274f-f352-457c-8f86-32c6d4df8...
The US claims the same
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CLOUD_Act
Lots of Americans in this thread seem to be talking down to other countries laws while being completely unaware of their own
Spot on, 727 comments, most probably by Americans, and only 2 (including yours) bringing up the CLOUD Act, the much worse US equivalent. Incredible ignorance.
Providing encrypted data and not providing encryption are two different things. The CLOUD act requires you to hand over data. It could be encrypted. The UK government is asking to hand over data that is also not encrypted. The two are not the same. Note : Not American.