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Apple-UK data privacy row should not be secret, court rules


The Home Office has failed in its bid to keep all the details of its data privacy legal row with Apple out of the public domain.

The UK government wants the right to be able access information secured by Apple’s Advanced Data Protection (ADP) system, citing powers given to it under the Investigatory Powers Act.

At the moment Apple has no such capability – such data can only be accessed by the user – and says it does not want to create what it calls a “backdoor” into ADP because of concerns it could be used for criminal purposes.

The government’s request prompted fierce criticism from privacy campaigners and some US politicians.

In February, Apple pulled ADP from the UK and in March launched legal proceedings against the government, in a case which is being heard by the Investigatory Powers Tribunal.

The government argued it would damage national security if the nature of the legal action – and the parties to it – were made public, what are known as the “bare details of the case”.

In a ruling published on Monday morning, the tribunal judges rejected that request – pointing to the extensive media reporting of the row and highlighting the legal principle of open justice.

“It would have been a truly extraordinary step to conduct a hearing entirely in secret without any public revelation of the fact that a hearing was taking place,” it states.

“For the reasons that are set out in our private judgement, we do not accept that the revelation of the bare details of the case would be damaging to the public interest or prejudicial to national security,” it later adds.

The Home Office have been asked to comment but have yet to respond.


The Home Office has failed in its bid to keep all the details of its data privacy legal row with Apple out of the public domain.

The UK government wants the right to be able access information secured by Apple’s Advanced Data Protection (ADP) system, citing powers given to it under the Investigatory Powers Act.

At the moment Apple has no such capability – such data can only be accessed by the user – and says it does not want to create what it calls a “backdoor” into ADP because of concerns it could be used for criminal purposes.

The government’s request prompted fierce criticism from privacy campaigners and some US politicians.

In February, Apple pulled ADP from the UK and in March launched legal proceedings against the government, in a case which is being heard by the Investigatory Powers Tribunal.

The government argued it would damage national security if the nature of the legal action – and the parties to it – were made public, what are known as the “bare details of the case”.

In a ruling published on Monday morning, the tribunal judges rejected that request – pointing to the extensive media reporting of the row and highlighting the legal principle of open justice.

“It would have been a truly extraordinary step to conduct a hearing entirely in secret without any public revelation of the fact that a hearing was taking place,” it states.

“For the reasons that are set out in our private judgement, we do not accept that the revelation of the bare details of the case would be damaging to the public interest or prejudicial to national security,” it later adds.

The Home Office have been asked to comment but have yet to respond.

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