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THAILAND LIVE Thailand Live Sunday 9 February 2025
to continue: Thailand Live Monday 10 February 2025 https://aseannow.com/topic/1351254-thailand-live-monday-10-february-2025/ -
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Samsung A55-5G Macro image of Mango Blossom at night: What's wrong? if anything?
You should quit photography while your ahead. -
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What's your favourite milk to put in coffee?
The milk sitting the closest to the coffee cup. -
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The UK Just Went Orwell 1984 – And Apple Might Be Its First Victim
Here we go again, another government demanding backdoor access to our encrypted data, bunch of back door fiends, all in the name of “security.” This time, it’s the UK government trying to force Apple to compromise iCloud encryption under the guise of the Investigatory Powers Act. If Apple folds to this demand, it won’t just be UK users at risk, it will be everyone with any personal data on iCloud, worldwide. Do those plonkers in the UK government really think people will sit back and accept this or that Apple will just roll over with no questions asked? The moment Apple allows a backdoor into the iCloud to anyone, the entire premise of Apple’s security-first approach collapses. Users aren’t stupid. They’ll pull their data, disable cloud backups, and some might even ditch Apple entirely for something that doesn’t sell them out. It would be a black swan event for Apple. Apple built its brand on privacy, caving to the demands now from that small, pesky island across the channel from France, would destroy trust and send customers running to alternative solutions like decentralized storage or more privacy-focused devices. And let’s not pretend this is just about the UK. If Apple sets this precedent, the US, EU, China, and every other government will demand the same access. Once the encryption is weakened, it’s only a matter of time before hackers exploit the same vulnerabilities, leaving everyone’s data exposed. This is straight out of the NSA's old playbook from the Bush and Obama eras, when mass data collection took off under the Patriot Act. The government began pulling vast amounts of personal user data from Google and other tech companies, a practice later exposed by Edward Snowden. The UK is now heading down the same dystopian path, demanding absolute surveillance powers at the expense of individual privacy. And as usual, it’s being justified under the guise of “national security.” We’ve seen where this road leads; mass surveillance, abuses of power, and a world where private conversations are anything but private. Apple needs to fight this. If they don’t, they’re finished as a company that values user security. And if the UK government succeeds in bullying them into compliance, what’s stopping them from demanding even more control over our data in the future? --- If you're not familiar with what I'm talking about, you can see these links below: https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2025/feb/07/uk-confronts-apple-with-demand-for-cloud-backdoor-to-users-encrypted-data https://www.cnet.com/tech/services-and-software/uk-government-reportedly-demands-backdoor-access-your-apple-icloud-account/ -
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