It may be more difficult for hackers and other intruders to grab your iCloud data. Apple is introducing a trio of security measures that include Advanced Data Protection, an optional feature that applies end-to-end encryption to more iCloud data. While Apple was already protecting 14 data categories, the new offering protects 23 — including iCloud device backups, photos and notes. Your calendar, contacts and iCloud Mail are still unencrypted to support global systems.
Advanced Data Protection is available to try in the US today as part of the Apple Beta Software Program. Americans will have broader access by the end of 2022. Other countries will have access sometime in early 2023. You’ll have to set up an alternative recovery method if you enable the technology, as Apple won’t have the keys needed to salvage your data.
The two further safeguards are aimed more at preventing misuses of accounts and devices. iMessage Contact Key Verification will help those who face “extraordinary” threats (such as activists, government officials and journalists) ensure that chat participants are authentic. You’ll get an automatic alert if a state-sponsored hacker or similar intruder manages to add a rogue device to an account. Users with the feature enabled can even compare verification codes through FaceTime, secure calls and in person.
iCloud users will also have the option of using hardware security keys as part of two-factor authentication. This includes both plug-in keys as well as NFC keys that only need to sit close to your iPhone. Both the iMessage and security key protections will be available worldwide in 2023.
At the same time, Apple is backing away from its controversial efforts to screen for child sexual abuse material (CSAM). The company tellsWired it has shelved a technology that would have detected known CSAM photos in iCloud and flagged accounts for reviews if they held a certain number of the toxic images. The change of heart comes after “extensive consultation” with experts, according to Apple — the company has decided that it can protect children without searching this data. Instead, it’s focusing on opt-in Communication Safety features that warn parents about nudity in iMessage photos as well as attempts to search for CSAM using Safari, Siri and Spotlight.
Apple plans to expand Communication Safety to recognize nudity in videos as well as content in other communications apps. The company further hopes to enable third-party support for the feature so that many apps can flag child abuse. There’s no timeframe for when these extra capabilities will arrive.
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Source: Engadget – Apple’s expanded iCloud encryption protects your backups and photos