A secret order would compel Apple to build a back door into its most secure iCloud backup option, The Washington Post reports ...
Apple released a new app this week called Apple Invites that allows users to create beautiful e-vites they can share with their contacts.
Anyone can receive and accept an invite. If you don't have an iPhone with the Invites app, you can always RSVP with the web link you receive, which will take you to icloud.com/invites. It's still ...
In a shocking twist that sounds straight out of a spy thriller, Britain’s security chiefs are demanding Apple create a secret ...
Apple Invites has a handful of features that are only available for certain users. Here’s who can use the new app and its various features.
Apple has launched a brand-new app for iPhone, called Apple Invites. As the name suggests, this free iOS app is designed to ...
The Washington Post said the Home Office issued an order to the tech giant under the Investigatory Powers Act.
The government wants access to not just the data of iCloud users in the UK, but from around the world, according to a report.
Apple Inc.’s feature to enable end-to-end encryption for user iCloud accounts has come under fire in the UK, where government ...
The UK government demanded Apple create a back door on users' encrypted iCloud accounts to retrieve the content any user ...
Given today's bombshell report revealing the UK government's unprecedented demand for backdoor access to encrypted iCloud ...
The secret order would give the UK access to encrypted backups belonging to any user — not just Brits.