FTC Chair Warns Tech Companies Against Compromising Encryption
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FTC Chair Andrew Ferguson has warned major US tech companies to resist foreign government pressure to weaken encryption. Ferguson emphasized the importance of encryption for protecting public discourse and consumer privacy. He cited examples of foreign laws and policies that have led to censorship and degraded security measures. The FTC Chair also warned that complying with such regulations could violate the FTC Act. The letter was sent to executives at Akamai, Alphabet, Amazon, Apple, Cloudflare, Discord, GoDaddy, Meta, Microsoft, Signal, Snap, Slack, and X. The warning comes amid increasing global pressure on tech companies to provide backdoor access to encrypted data.
Timeline
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25.08.2025 22:58 📰 1 articles
FTC Chair Warns Tech Companies About Foreign Encryption Pressure
FTC Chair Andrew Ferguson sent a letter to major US tech companies on August 25, 2025, warning them against complying with foreign government demands to weaken encryption. Ferguson emphasized the importance of encryption for protecting public discourse and consumer privacy. He cited examples of foreign laws and policies that have led to censorship and degraded security measures. The warning comes amid increasing global pressure on tech companies to provide backdoor access to encrypted data.
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- FTC Chair Tells Tech Giants to Hold the Line on Encryption — www.darkreading.com — 25.08.2025 22:58
Information Snippets
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FTC Chair Andrew Ferguson sent letters to major tech companies warning against weakening encryption.
First reported: 25.08.2025 22:58📰 1 source, 1 articleShow sources
- FTC Chair Tells Tech Giants to Hold the Line on Encryption — www.darkreading.com — 25.08.2025 22:58
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Ferguson highlighted the importance of encryption for protecting public discourse and consumer privacy.
First reported: 25.08.2025 22:58📰 1 source, 1 articleShow sources
- FTC Chair Tells Tech Giants to Hold the Line on Encryption — www.darkreading.com — 25.08.2025 22:58
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Foreign governments, including the UK, have implemented laws requiring backdoor access to encrypted data.
First reported: 25.08.2025 22:58📰 1 source, 1 articleShow sources
- FTC Chair Tells Tech Giants to Hold the Line on Encryption — www.darkreading.com — 25.08.2025 22:58
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Examples of foreign pressure include the EU's Digital Services Act and the UK's Online Safety Act.
First reported: 25.08.2025 22:58📰 1 source, 1 articleShow sources
- FTC Chair Tells Tech Giants to Hold the Line on Encryption — www.darkreading.com — 25.08.2025 22:58
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Apple removed Advanced Data Protection for UK users due to government pressure.
First reported: 25.08.2025 22:58📰 1 source, 1 articleShow sources
- FTC Chair Tells Tech Giants to Hold the Line on Encryption — www.darkreading.com — 25.08.2025 22:58
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Complying with foreign encryption regulations could violate Section 5 of the FTC Act.
First reported: 25.08.2025 22:58📰 1 source, 1 articleShow sources
- FTC Chair Tells Tech Giants to Hold the Line on Encryption — www.darkreading.com — 25.08.2025 22:58
Similar Happenings
FTC warns US tech firms against weakening encryption for foreign governments
The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) has warned major U.S. tech companies not to comply with foreign government demands that weaken encryption, compromise data security, or impose censorship. The warning comes amidst increasing pressure from foreign governments to access encrypted data and censor content. The FTC emphasizes that complying with such demands would violate the FTC Act and expose companies to legal consequences. The FTC's letter, signed by Chairman Andrew N. Ferguson, was sent to companies including Akamai, Alphabet (Google), Amazon, Apple, Cloudflare, Discord, GoDaddy, Meta, Microsoft, Signal, Snap, Slack, and X (Twitter). The letter highlights the potential risks to American users, including increased surveillance, identity theft, and fraud. The warning follows a recent incident where Apple was pressured to remove support for iCloud end-to-end encryption in the UK, a demand that was later retracted due to U.S. diplomatic pressure. The FTC's letter mentions the EU’s Digital Services Act and the UK’s Online Safety Act and Investigatory Powers Act as examples of foreign laws pressuring tech companies. The FTC expressed concern that companies might simplify compliance with foreign laws by censoring Americans or increasing foreign surveillance.