Canada’s online safety bill could threaten encryption, Apple & Google push for amendments
AI-summarised brief · reviewed before publication
Apple and Google have expressed concerns over Canada's online safety bill, C-22, which aims to give law enforcement access to encrypted data. The bill does not specify how companies should hand over encrypted data, and Apple has stated it cannot provide end-to-end encrypted data as it does not have the key. Representatives from both companies have spoken out, seeking judicial oversight and protections for encryption in the bill. Apple has hinted it may pull out of Canada if required to build a backdoor. The bill is currently being debated in the House of Commons, with Apple and Google pushing for amendments to protect user data and encryption.
💡 Why It Matters
- · Judicial oversight is crucial to prevent secret orders that could undermine companies' ability to transparently protect user data.
- · Mandatory backdoors would compromise the security of encrypted data, affecting not just companies but also individual users.