The US director of national intelligence says the UK has withdrawn its controversial demand to access global Apple users’ data if required.
Tulsi Gabbard said in a post on X the UK had agreed to drop its instruction for the tech giant to provide a “back door” which would have “enabled access to the protected encrypted data of American citizens and encroached on our civil liberties”.
The understands Apple has not yet received any formal communication from either the US or UK governments.
The Home Office has been approached for comment.
In December, the UK issued Apple with a formal notice demanding the right to access encrypted data from its users worldwide.
However Apple itself cannot view the data of customers who have activated its toughest security tool, Advanced Data Protection (ADP), which prevents anyone other than the user from reading their files.
In order to do so, it would have had to break its own encryption methods.
“We have never built a backdoor or master key to any of our products or services, and we never will,” it said.
Instead, Apple responded by withdrawing ADP from the UK market, and started a legal process to challenge the order. This was due to be heard at a tribunal in early 2026.
It is not yet clear whether that will continue to go ahead.
Because of the secrecy surrounding the government order, issued under the Investigatory Powers Act, it is not known whether other tech companies have also received a demand.
The messaging platform WhatsApp, used by millions of Brits, says so far it has not.
The notice, which neither Apple nor the Home Office has ever confirmed, enraged privacy campaigners. Privacy International and Liberty launched their own separate legal action against the UK government in response.
There is already a legal agreement between the US and UK governments – the Data Access Agreement – which allows both countries to share data for law enforcement purposes.