Trump compares UK’s demand for Apple user data to Chinese monitoring

Trump compares UK’s demand for Apple user data to Chinese monitoring

British PM Keir Starmer met the US president for the first time since Jan 20, to discuss Ukraine and negotiate a bilateral trade agreement.

The UK’s Prime Minister Keir Starmer (right) is greeted by President Donald Trump as he arrives at the White House in Washington on Thursday. (AP pic)
WASHINGTON:
US President Donald Trump likened the UK government’s demand that Apple grant it access to some user data as “something that you hear about with China,” in an interview with The Spectator political magazine published Friday.

Trump said that he had told British Prime Minister Keir Starmer that he “can’t do this”, referring to the request for access to data. The two met at the White House on Thursday for the first time since the US leader took office, discussing Ukraine and negotiating a bilateral trade agreement.

“We actually told him (Starmer) … that’s incredible. That’s something, you know, that you hear about with China,” Trump said in his first magazine interview of his second term with the magazine’s editor-at-large Ben Domenech.

A spokesman for the British government said “we have a close intelligence relationship with the US and we take the partnership seriously” but did not comment on the specifics of the Apple case. The company did not respond to a Reuters request for comment.

Apple last week ended an advanced security encryption feature for cloud data for UK users in an unprecedented response to government demands for access to user data. A spokesman for the UK’s home ministry had then declined to comment on whether such an order had been issued.

In a letter dated Feb 25 to two US lawmakers, Tulsi Gabbard, the US director of national intelligence, said the US is examining whether the UK government had violated the Cloud Act, which bars it from issuing demands for the data of US citizens and vice versa.

The Spectator, which is influential in Conservative circles and was previously edited by former prime minister Boris Johnson, was bought last year by British hedge fund founder Paul Marshall.

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