Apple's Legal Process Guidelines updated with stricter rules for notifications subpoena
Government notification surveillance is now more difficult with Apple's latest Legal Process Guidelines requiring court-issued search warrants.
Senator Ron Wyden revealed that the government used notification data obtained from Apple and Google to learn about persons of interest. Apple had previously been under a gag order to keep these requests secret but is now able to share information about the requests.
Only a few days after Apple added the notification information to its Legal Process Guidelines, the company updated them with stricter requirements. Daring Fireball was the first to spot and report the change to Apple's documentation.
From Apple's documentation:
When users allow an application they have installed to receive push notifications, an Apple Push Notification Service (APNs) token is generated and registered to that developer and device. Some apps may have multiple APNs tokens for one account on one device to differentiate between messages and multi-media.
The Apple ID associated with a registered APNs token and associated records may be obtained with an order under 18 U.S.C. 2703(d) or a search warrant.
Previously, the section read the push notification token could be obtained with "a subpoena or greater legal process." Stepping up to requiring a search warrant is a significant change and reflects the same requirements provided by Google.
5 Comments
Kudos for the change
It’s a bit embarrassing that Apple had lower standards for this than Google did, but of course I don’t know the whole story about how that happened. I’m glad they have raised the requirement for this form of sometimes-necessary eavesdropping to be in sync with Google.
The stance at the beginning should have been get a warrant period. Which would be the same if the government came to your door asking to search.
I think the issue boils down to lack of legal recourse at that point.
If Apple reveals non-public info covered by a gag order the Govt could sue them on the grounds that Apple's action caused the Govt harm.
But once the info is made public (by someone else) there's no way the Govt. could claim in court that Apple caused them harm by revealing info to the public that was *already* public.