The amendments to the Investigatory Powers Bill, allegedly intended to make people safer, will undoubtedly make UK digital infrastructure a tempting target as the regulations will be weaken security there. The biggest problem for Apple, other than the steady erosion of encryption, is that essential security and privacy updates might be delayed or never appear — and without any transparency or scrutiny at all.
If passed, the law would mean that every tech security update must be reviewed by UK authorities before release, which will immediately delay distribution of vital security patches.
Hackers will immediately see this means any patched vulnerabilities will be secured in the UK last, making the nation an incredibly attractive target to attack. Hackers are organized enough to spot and exploit weakness. It’s what they do.
And if the UK rejects an update, that update cannot be released in any other nation and the public would not be informed of the decision.
That sounds like the UK wants every software and hardware vendor to flee its market.
I don’t see how that part is supposed to play out anyway.
What happens if the UKHO rejects an update, but it is then rolled out everywhere else?
This is their thought process:
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2023/dec/04/dutch-media-report-claim-boris-johnson-planned-raid-on-vaccine-plant-in-2021
So, did someone tell them the Empire is long gone and after Brexit, UK’s all on their own now?
…which you btw can also clearly see by Apple freely attacking them in this article. They are neither afraid nor do they feel the need to appease.
“We doubled our domestic software industry!”