Technology
Ex-Facebook exec Alex Stamos calls out Apple’s Tim Cook over privacy
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Former Facebook security boss Alex Stamos criticised
Tim Cook’s hypocrisy after the Apple CEO launched a blistering
attack on firms that flout user privacy. -
Stamos pointed to Apple’s trade practices in China,
which block privacy-enabling features like end-to-end
encryption and installing VPNs. -
He said for many tech companies, China is an “ethical
blindspot.”
Tim Cook launched a blistering
attack on tech companies that flout user privacy in a speech on
Wednesday, but a former Facebook exec has accused him of not
practising what he preaches.
Although Cook did not name Facebook or Google, they were a clear
target of his remarks in Brussels, where he said that people’s
data is “being weaponized against us with military efficiency” to
“enrich” companies that collect the information.
But Alex Stamos, Facebook’s former security chief who led its
internal investigation into Russian interference in the 2016
presidential election, said Apple is not above compromising user
privacy in China.
I agree with almost everything Tim Cook said in his privacy speech today, which is why it is so sad to see the media credulously covering his statements without the context of Apple’s actions in China.https://t.co/UIxJovocFc
— Alex Stamos (@alexstamos) October 24, 2018
In a series of tweets, he said Apple blocks privacy-enabling
services like end-to-end encryption and installing VPNs on its
devices in China. Stamos also pointed out that Apple recently
moved its iCloud data to a
state-owned telecom company.
The missing context? Apple uses hardware-rooted DRM to deny Chinese users the ability to install the VPN and E2E messaging apps that would allow them to avoid pervasive censorship and surveillance. Apple moved iCloud data into a PRC-controlled joint venture with unclear impacts.
— Alex Stamos (@alexstamos) October 24, 2018
Cook has
previously said in an interview that Apple’s data stored in
China is still safely under lock and key. “We worked with a
Chinese company to provide iCloud, but the keys […] are ours,”
he told Vice earlier this month.
Stamos said China is an “ethical blindspot” for many tech
companies. He said firms take advantage of weaker workers’ rights
to manufacture their products, comply with China’s surveillance
laws, and ignore the environmental damage of Chinese Bitcoin
farms.
Stamos and Cook did agree on one thing: That the US needs a
robust privacy law and companies like Facebook and Twitter need
to minimize how much data they collect.
China is an ethical blind spot for many in tech: We ignore the working conditions under which our beautiful devices are made, the censorship and surveillance necessary to ship apps there, the environmental externalities of coal-powered Chinese Bitcoin farms.
— Alex Stamos (@alexstamos) October 24, 2018
Stamos also criticised the media for allowing Cook to effectively
take a shot across Facebook’s bows by ignoring the diminished
right to privacy of Chinese citizens.
We don’t want the media to create an incentive structure that ignores treating Chinese citizens as less-deserving of privacy protections because a CEO is willing to bad-mouth the business model of their primary competitor, who uses advertising to subsidize cheaper devices.
— Alex Stamos (@alexstamos) October 24, 2018
Business Insider has contacted Apple for comment.
Tech’s trouble with China has been in the spotlight recently
because of Google’s attempts to re-enter the market. Google has
drawn fire both
externally and
internally for its reported plans to
launch a censored search engine to comply with Chinese laws.
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