
The secret order of the British government was challenged by two civil rights organizations of Liber and Privacy International, two civil rights organizations who complained on Thursday, which required the end -to -end encryption version of the iCloud storage service as a backdoor. They called this command a “unacceptable and imbalance” and warned of “global results” because the order of access is thought to be extended to users, not UK users.
The two instructed the two nominated individuals to challenge the Minister of Home Affairs to the legal company, Lei Day, along with Gus Josesin, the head of the international execution of personal information, and Ben Wizner, a civil advocate.
Determination of Yvette Cooper to provide services to Apple with the so -called technical ability notification (TCN) according to the Investigator PowerS Act (IPA). The presence of a secret order only appeared only in last month’s media report.
“International and freedom of personal information protection and freedom can be used to undermine the end -to -end encryption, which is essential for personal information protection and free expression protection, fearing this TCN or future similar TCN.”
Apple has already filed a legal challenge to TCN. In addition, the Investigation Court (IPT), an agency that oversees complaints about the UK intelligence agency, will complain. Civil rights groups, Hosein and Wizner are all direct victims of the government’s TCN decision and have been asked for complaints about Apple’s complaints.
They are also calling for a public case, not behind the closed door. The IPT hearing is expected to be scheduled today on Friday, March 14.