Apple plans to scan your images for child porn
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On the other hand, if what I am implying is true.....
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@marcinozga said in Apple plans to scan your images for child porn:
I bet 100% of parents have pictures of their naked children.
Definitely not. Including your child's genitals in a photo is a conscious decision you don't need to do.
We have photos of our children playing in the bathtub for example, but also made the conscious effort to not include their genitals in the photo. There's no reason to include that in the photo regardless of intentions.
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@carnival-boy said in Apple plans to scan your images for child porn:
On the other hand, if what I am implying is true.....
Then still nothing changes. If what you imply is true, the risk we are worried about is still there.
What you are implying is that we blindly trust a private company AND all governments that have proven themselves to be untrustworthy and not working in the public's interest.
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@dashrender said in Apple plans to scan your images for child porn:
I haven't read the article.
that said - if what you lot are implying is true... then Apple basically just took a giant shit all over their Privacy first dance they've been doing for the past 5+ years.
I don't think that there is an implication. The giant shit has already been taken. It's now done, their privacy game is over (for American customers.)
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@dashrender said in Apple plans to scan your images for child porn:
I wonder why apple is doing this? why now?
Pressure from an authoritative regime concerned, as always, with curtailing freedom of speech without directly doing so in a way that gets the public to take action.
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@carnival-boy said in Apple plans to scan your images for child porn:
If you don't use iCloud I don't think you have anything to be concerned about. They cannot access your phone.
The claim of the news release is that they are accessing the phones. That's the entire set of concern. If the entire thing is fake, then of course, it's fake and it's not a problem. The concern is not Apple scanning data that THEY host, it's scanning data that WE host.
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@carnival-boy said in Apple plans to scan your images for child porn:
Which bits. I don't find the article that clear.
Very clear, first line: "Apple intends to install software on American iPhones to scan for child abuse imagery, according to people briefed on its plans"
Installing software. On your device. Unless the sources are incorrect, this is crystal clear that they can access YOUR DATA and that the iCloud component is a red herring. This is the part that the researchers, and the people here, are concerned about.
This is like Pegasus. Sure, in theory it's used to stop terrorism. In the real world it is used to threaten reporters.
Anything that can scan your pictures can also steal them or plant new ones, at will. Will they? Sure, they say that they won't. But you cannot, ever, under any circumstances, trust a company that would do this to your phone. So that they cannot be trusted anymore, if the article is real, is a given.
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According to the article: "The proposals are Apple’s attempt to find a compromise between its own promise to protect customers’ privacy...."
The article states that this is Apple compromising on the promise of privacy. Compromising on privacy is, obviously, the same as going back on it. If the article is correct, Apple has flat out decided that their privacy stance is no longer their policy (in the USA.)
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@scottalanmiller said in Apple plans to scan your images for child porn:
@carnival-boy said in Apple plans to scan your images for child porn:
If you don't use iCloud I don't think you have anything to be concerned about. They cannot access your phone.
The claim of the news release is that they are accessing the phones. That's the entire set of concern. If the entire thing is fake, then of course, it's fake and it's not a problem. The concern is not Apple scanning data that THEY host, it's scanning data that WE host.
Not fake, confirmed by Apple, https://www.apple.com/child-safety/
These features are coming later this year in updates to iOS 15, iPadOS 15, watchOS 8, and macOS Monterey.*
and further
Apple’s method of detecting known CSAM is designed with user privacy in mind. Instead of scanning images in the cloud, the system performs on-device matching using a database of known CSAM image hashes provided by NCMEC and other child safety organizations. Apple further transforms this database into an unreadable set of hashes that is securely stored on users’ devices.
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I was planning on getting an iPhone and this is definitely enough for me to go look at Xiaomi again who, by the way, has SO MUCH BETTER cameras anyway.
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@scottalanmiller said in Apple plans to scan your images for child porn:
I was planning on getting an iPhone and this is definitely enough for me to go look at Xiaomi again who, by the way, has SO MUCH BETTER cameras anyway.
I might actually go back to flip phones. Once Apple implements this, Google and others will follow in no time.
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@marcinozga said in Apple plans to scan your images for child porn:
@scottalanmiller said in Apple plans to scan your images for child porn:
I was planning on getting an iPhone and this is definitely enough for me to go look at Xiaomi again who, by the way, has SO MUCH BETTER cameras anyway.
I might actually go back to flip phones. Once Apple implements this, Google and others will follow in no time.
Exactly - we're just kinda stuck.
I now need a non connected thin device for camera purposes... don't want to go to Point and Shoot.
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@marcinozga said in Apple plans to scan your images for child porn:
@scottalanmiller said in Apple plans to scan your images for child porn:
@carnival-boy said in Apple plans to scan your images for child porn:
If you don't use iCloud I don't think you have anything to be concerned about. They cannot access your phone.
The claim of the news release is that they are accessing the phones. That's the entire set of concern. If the entire thing is fake, then of course, it's fake and it's not a problem. The concern is not Apple scanning data that THEY host, it's scanning data that WE host.
Not fake, confirmed by Apple, https://www.apple.com/child-safety/
These features are coming later this year in updates to iOS 15, iPadOS 15, watchOS 8, and macOS Monterey.*
and further
Apple’s method of detecting known CSAM is designed with user privacy in mind. Instead of scanning images in the cloud, the system performs on-device matching using a database of known CSAM image hashes provided by NCMEC and other child safety organizations. Apple further transforms this database into an unreadable set of hashes that is securely stored on users’ devices.
Yup, just found it. Yeah, Ars Technica was completely correct.
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@dashrender said in Apple plans to scan your images for child porn:
@marcinozga said in Apple plans to scan your images for child porn:
@scottalanmiller said in Apple plans to scan your images for child porn:
I was planning on getting an iPhone and this is definitely enough for me to go look at Xiaomi again who, by the way, has SO MUCH BETTER cameras anyway.
I might actually go back to flip phones. Once Apple implements this, Google and others will follow in no time.
Exactly - we're just kinda stuck.
I now need a non connected thin device for camera purposes... don't want to go to Point and Shoot.
Why not? Some point and shoots are fantastic! I just bought the Olympus E-PL9!
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@scottalanmiller said in Apple plans to scan your images for child porn:
@dashrender said in Apple plans to scan your images for child porn:
@marcinozga said in Apple plans to scan your images for child porn:
@scottalanmiller said in Apple plans to scan your images for child porn:
I was planning on getting an iPhone and this is definitely enough for me to go look at Xiaomi again who, by the way, has SO MUCH BETTER cameras anyway.
I might actually go back to flip phones. Once Apple implements this, Google and others will follow in no time.
Exactly - we're just kinda stuck.
I now need a non connected thin device for camera purposes... don't want to go to Point and Shoot.
Why not? Some point and shoots are fantastic! I just bought the Olympus E-PL9!
Cause it won't fit in my back pocket, that's all.
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@carnival-boy said in Apple plans to scan your images for child porn:
And the Apple link clearly says it isn't doing what the article initially says will happen.
Actually Apple's link completely confirms the concerns. Not sure what you read, but you missed Apple's statements.
"Instead of scanning images in the cloud, the system performs on-device matching using a database"
You were claiming that they only scanned cloud, but Apple says the exactly opposite, twice.
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@dashrender said in Apple plans to scan your images for child porn:
@scottalanmiller said in Apple plans to scan your images for child porn:
@dashrender said in Apple plans to scan your images for child porn:
@marcinozga said in Apple plans to scan your images for child porn:
@scottalanmiller said in Apple plans to scan your images for child porn:
I was planning on getting an iPhone and this is definitely enough for me to go look at Xiaomi again who, by the way, has SO MUCH BETTER cameras anyway.
I might actually go back to flip phones. Once Apple implements this, Google and others will follow in no time.
Exactly - we're just kinda stuck.
I now need a non connected thin device for camera purposes... don't want to go to Point and Shoot.
Why not? Some point and shoots are fantastic! I just bought the Olympus E-PL9!
Cause it won't fit in my back pocket, that's all.
I would never put a phone in my back pocket, either. It'll fit in a normal pocket, though.
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@scottalanmiller said in Apple plans to scan your images for child porn:
@dashrender said in Apple plans to scan your images for child porn:
@scottalanmiller said in Apple plans to scan your images for child porn:
@dashrender said in Apple plans to scan your images for child porn:
@marcinozga said in Apple plans to scan your images for child porn:
@scottalanmiller said in Apple plans to scan your images for child porn:
I was planning on getting an iPhone and this is definitely enough for me to go look at Xiaomi again who, by the way, has SO MUCH BETTER cameras anyway.
I might actually go back to flip phones. Once Apple implements this, Google and others will follow in no time.
Exactly - we're just kinda stuck.
I now need a non connected thin device for camera purposes... don't want to go to Point and Shoot.
Why not? Some point and shoots are fantastic! I just bought the Olympus E-PL9!
Cause it won't fit in my back pocket, that's all.
I would never put a phone in my back pocket, either. It'll fit in a normal pocket, though.
Well, I guess that's good for you. I do all day nearly everyday, have my phone in my back pocket.
I definitely won't be carrying around a camera in my front jeans pocket.
If I was like you wearing cargo shorts every day, everywhere, it wouldn't be an issue, but I don't - I wear jeans 90% of the time.
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Here's a real world example how badly AI can screw up:
If Tesla thinks Moon is a traffic light, what are the odds of AI on your phone mistaking child in a bathtub for actual porn image?
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@marcinozga said in Apple plans to scan your images for child porn:
Here's a real world example how badly AI can screw up:
If Tesla thinks Moon is a traffic light, what are the odds of AI on your phone mistaking child in a bathtub for actual porn image?
More importantly, directly from Apple... the list comes from "other organizations." Not even a strict list of organizations. If you want to detect something on someone's phone all you need to do is convince, social engineer, or pay off any of those random third parties to add something that you want into their database and voila, Apple is now searching for anything that you want them to. Apple won't even know that they are looking for people wanting to promote voter rights or reporting news about police brutality, or journalists exposing a new concentration camp inside our own borders! Apple is just giving tools for the government to spy on you, they are providing no mechanism to ensure, or even suggest, that it sticks to the supposed topic. Their own press release tells us how it is open to anything an unlisted number of third parties (that are private companies) decide to search for.