Apple's rumored efforts to create a unhackable iPhone, warranted or otherwise, is reportedly extending to its cloud service, iCloud, too.
Investigators with a court order have been able to access data through Apple's iCloud servers. But Financial Times states that the Cupertino, CA-based company has plans to lock down customer data on iCloud backups with encryption even Apple itself can't break.
The timing of the purported move to further seal away customers' data likely isn't a coincidence. In case you need a refresher, Apple is currently in the midst of a controversial legal dispute with the FBI following the deadly San Bernardino attack.
An iPhone that belonged to one of the attackers is in the hands of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. In an effort to access the information within, the organization has filed a court order, seeking to force Apple into creating a "back door," so to speak, into iOS.
So far, Apple has refused the order. Apple CEO Tim Cook appeared in an ABC interview to deliver the heavy-handed statement that doing as the FBI asks would be to essentially build the "software equivalent of cancer." Cook argued that unlocking even one iPhone for the organization's efforts in the investigation would create a loophole, allowing access into any iOS device in the future.
The argument that divides Apple and the FBI, as well as the opinion of the public, continues on. But if the rumors are true, your data stored on iCloud data is about to become more secure than ever.
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