+0.15 UK pulls back from clash with Big Tech over private messaging (www.ft.com S:-0.15 )
743 points by alwillis 905 days ago | 302 comments on HN | Neutral Landing Page · v3.7 · 2026-02-28 13:28:52
Summary Tech Regulation & Privacy Neutral
This Financial Times article addresses UK government policy toward technology companies and private messaging, with the headline framing a policy shift as reduced regulatory conflict. However, the article is behind a paywall, preventing substantive HRCB evaluation beyond the visible headline and page structure. The domain demonstrates commitment to journalism and accessibility features, which is offset by the structural access barrier that restricts public information access.
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Weighted Mean -0.06 Unweighted Mean -0.06
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Confidence 1% Volatility 0.00 (Low)
Negative 1 Channels E: 0.6 S: 0.4
SETL +0.21 Editorial-dominant
FW Ratio 50% 5 facts · 5 inferences
Evidence: High: 0 Medium: 0 Low: 2 No Data: 29
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Foundation Security Legal Privacy & Movement Personal Expression Economic & Social Cultural Order & Duties Foundation: 0.00 (0 articles) Security: 0.00 (0 articles) Legal: 0.00 (0 articles) Privacy & Movement: 0.00 (0 articles) Personal: 0.00 (0 articles) Expression: -0.06 (1 articles) Economic & Social: 0.00 (0 articles) Cultural: 0.00 (0 articles) Order & Duties: 0.00 (0 articles)
HN Discussion 20 top-level · 26 replies
ajb 2023-09-06 17:53 UTC link
It's a little unclear, but my reading of this is that the power to do it will still be in the law, requiring at most secondary legislation to put into effect (perhaps not even that) if they think they ever have enough leverage over messaging providers, or are willing to spend the political capital. Not a great place to be in really, but better than it actually being deployed.
thinkingemote 2023-09-06 18:24 UTC link
So it seems from the news that it was industry that forced this, but do we know how effective our campaigning and emails to MPs were? Or just some un-noteworthy political cog wheel action?

How could we find out? Do the reasons get leaked unofficially usually?

Jigsy 2023-09-06 18:56 UTC link
I'm not sure why people are assuming they've abandoned the idea. They've simply said it's not technically feasible.

Which implies that later - through the power of delusions of grandeur - that it will become feasible.

b800h 2023-09-06 18:57 UTC link
That bit isn't as bad as the part that says you can't run an interactive service without age verification though....
javajosh 2023-09-06 19:10 UTC link
Why ban e2ee when you could just pass a law giving LEO's the right to passively turn on any mic or camera or look through photos and messages on any smartphone at any time? I mean, how can they keep people safe without that access? Think of the children!
ascorbic 2023-09-06 19:12 UTC link
The whole UK government is run via WhatsApp. The threat to withdraw service should have concentrated minds.
greybox 2023-09-06 19:14 UTC link
The government are denying the 'U-Turn' which of course, as always, confirms it :P https://www.bbc.com/news/technology-66716502
tempodox 2023-09-06 19:22 UTC link
> the tech regulator would only require companies to scan their networks when a technology is developed that is capable of doing so.

IOW, as soon as backdoors are implemented. And we only have to lose this battle once.

arichard123 2023-09-06 19:28 UTC link
Their purposes have been served. Values have been signalled. Implementation was never going to be possible, which made it all the better a choice, as it means you don't have to actually do anything except blame tech companies when it doesn't happen. Job done.
codeptualize 2023-09-06 19:57 UTC link
You see this time and time again, some initiative to "just introduce some backdoors, what could go wrong", and then it takes some time for people who understand what it actually means to convince them that it is in fact a really bad idea and it would be a giant disaster.
happytiger 2023-09-06 20:21 UTC link
It’s time that encryption rights become human rights.
shmerl 2023-09-06 20:22 UTC link
So they idiotically put into the law something like "wait for technology to be developed to allow snooping without compromising security"? Such lawmakers shouldn't allowed anywhere near making laws.
dfawcus 2023-09-06 20:39 UTC link
The real question is will Signal, WhatsApp, Apples, etc stick to their principals and withdraw UK service if the Bill passes in its current form?

Or will they decide to believe that the powers will not be used, and keep their service in operation?

simonjgreen 2023-09-06 21:21 UTC link
When privacy is criminalised only criminals will have privacy
neonate 2023-09-06 21:53 UTC link
jll29 2023-09-06 23:30 UTC link
> A planned statement to the House of Lords on Wednesday afternoon will mark an eleventh-hour effort by ministers to end a stand-off with tech companies, including WhatsApp, that have threatened to pull their services from the UK

Dear FT, WhatsApp is not a company, the owner of the WhatsApp service is Meta Inc., also the owner of Facebook and Instagram. (It is misleading to citizens that companies can hide behind the names of their acquisitions.)

msla 2023-09-07 03:16 UTC link
This is framed wrong: It isn't UK against "Big Tech" it's the UK government against privacy and, to some extent, basic logic. That is, the UK government demanded something that's impossible to deliver, and would have ruined the privacy rights of its own citizens had it been able to force companies to deliver the next closest thing which actually got the government its core demands of the police being able to snoop on everyone's messages.
tremorscript 2023-09-07 05:22 UTC link
I don't really like the headline, it makes it sound negative.

Big Tech tends to have negative connotations, nowadays. So, here the FT is trying to say that a democratically elected government is living in fear of private firms.

While it may be true that our government are now living in fear of not just Big Tech but all types of Big whatever, the fight was way beyond just big tech. Sure Big Tech helped but it still is a badly written and badly thought out think-about-the-children type law that was being fought by everyone not just big tech.

I didn't bother to read the article. Headlines are important There are other things to rage about Big Tech, this is not the one.

Havoc 2023-09-07 07:40 UTC link
Summer break. The “think of the children” and security will be back shortly in a tweaked version
Arathorn 2023-09-07 08:30 UTC link
This article is completely wrong, and almost sabotages the fight against the UK Online Safety Bill, given it claims a victory that simply doesn't exist, and so lures everyone into a false sense of complacency. The UK govt must be ecstatic that they have changed nothing and yet the tech industry seems to believe that they've won something.

All the govt said was "we'll only force scanning when it's "technically feasible" to do so" - i.e. when someone believes the CSAM scanning quality is high enough beyond some given threshold. It's still scanning though, and still fundamentally undermines encryption; it's just potentialy delaying the implementation a bit... having enabled it in law. The thing we should be fighting is enabling it in law.

Politico just published an article which nailed it: https://www.politico.eu/article/whatsapp-signal-meta-faceboo...

> "On Wednesday, Whittaker and other privacy campaigners falsely claimed that London was pulling back from its bid to access encrypted messages"

Likewise, the Government has spelt out very clearly that they consider absolutely nothing to have changed: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-66716502

dang: it's almost worth flagging this thread as being based on entirely incorrect data. For whatever reason, the desire to make progress on this issue means that folks have jumped the gun and are prematurely celebrating a win which is not a win, and thus undermining the whole campaign to protect encryption.

halJordan 2023-09-06 18:53 UTC link
Yeah that was my reading as well. The legislation isn't being changed. The statement even says "We know you can develop [the methods to access], and we still have the authority to order it."

The only relevant part of from op is the govt acknowledging that 2+2 = 4. But it fails to acknowledge that if they want to get 5, they can still order the equation to be 3+2.

nonrandomstring 2023-09-06 18:56 UTC link
Maybe don't over-rate the influence of the industry.

The Conservative party's own members tore it to shreds.

From: https://cybershow.uk/media/episodes/OSB1_r2_2023-08-27.mp3 *

"The source of the bill itself, the UK Conservative Party, has a significant number of its own critics calling it "fundamentally misdesigned" David Davis said its well-intentioned attempts may constitute "the biggest accidental curtailment of free speech in modern history."

(* sadly my other sincere comment has been buried by people who apparently can't read past the first line)

glitchc 2023-09-06 19:00 UTC link
Not technically feasible is akin to abandonment in government circles.

To revive this, they would have to find an expert to attest that it is technically feasible to have security with a backdoor that government can access, but at the same time is impossible for malicious entities to access.

Ergo, this is technically dead, which is the best form of dead.

dmje 2023-09-06 19:04 UTC link
This is the bit that is scaring me, as someone who manages website for clients..
hn_throwaway_99 2023-09-06 19:13 UTC link
This isn't true, is it? If so that's slightly terrifying.
traceroute66 2023-09-06 19:30 UTC link
> do we know how effective our campaigning and emails to MPs were?

Campaigning to your MP is and always has been a waste of time.

In addition, the "safer" their seat, the more of a waste of space the MP is because they know their constituents would vote for a pig if the right coloured rosette pinned to it.

Most of the time they don't bother replying, and then if they do reply, you get a two-page party political broadcast, followed by a generic paragraph about "how they understand your concern blah blah blah" but never addressing the point at hand.

makingstuffs 2023-09-06 19:40 UTC link
I’d bet my life we start to see a massive influx of bad press aimed at messaging providers, focusing on how criminals are using their services, over the next few years.

When the general sentiment of the average Dave is ‘encryption === bad’ this BS will rear its head again.

Seems to have been the standard play for governments of this country for decades now.

Clamchop 2023-09-06 20:40 UTC link
Unfortunately I suspect they will just keep trying it out over and over until the public gets too exhausted to rally against it anymore.
developer93 2023-09-06 21:03 UTC link
The entire Tory party shouldn't be allowed anywhere near making laws...
lozf 2023-09-06 21:10 UTC link
We'd probably need to decrypt MP's WhatsApp messages to find out!
seabass-labrax 2023-09-06 21:55 UTC link
What's weird about that is how it has leapfrogged law in 'real-life'. Minors aren't prohibited from talking to adults face-to-face, and you don't need to show proof of age before starting a conversation with someone! This new bill would turn the internet from an environment where nothing is age-restricted (in practice, if not in law) to one where everything is^.

^ Again, in practice if not in law: since no service provider could fully identify and restrict all 'adult' material in real-time, they will be effectively unable to serve any interactive content to minors. Only if the penalties for non-compliance were low enough would the largest of companies take that risk.

nonethewiser 2023-09-06 23:33 UTC link
Can you elaborate? The article is paywalled. In what sense did they “back down” if not by backing down from the legislation that would violate privacy?
timenova 2023-09-07 00:00 UTC link
They said its technically unfeasible right now. A backdoor key is really not feasible for E2E Encryption. So, that would mean it would only become technically feasible when they ask companies to send over all encrypted packets and break the encryption themselves.

Maybe that's why they want to keep a provision for it in the law, but develop the technology to break (current) public-key encryption schemes themselves?

But then they'll always be chasing, as the world moves to post-quantum encryption and they won't be able to break it anymore. So it'll always remain technically unfeasible.

Its likely that from a political standpoint, it was easier to deem the bill as technically unfeasible now rather than kill it completely.

borissk 2023-09-07 00:03 UTC link
Did Mr Johnson provide his WhatsApp message history to the government?
nojvek 2023-09-07 00:05 UTC link
Google pulled from China, but Microsoft bowed down.

It’s really upto a few execs at tech giants betting how much money is at risk.

For UK and Canada, the state isn’t competent at building a clone of social networks with wide adoption.

China can throw insane money, regulation and Human Resources until they get what they want.

ciwolsey 2023-09-07 00:47 UTC link
Correct, there's been no ammendment to the bill, only promises it's not going to be used.
tjmc 2023-09-07 01:45 UTC link
So excuse what may be my profound ignorance, but aren't there 2 unencrypted points in every communication that they could intercept?

Very roughly, I assume every Whatsapp message follows something along the lines of:

1. Unencrypted input

2. Encryption

3. Encrypted transmission

4. Decryption

5. Unencrypted stream to display handler

Technically - what's to stop them from compelling Apple and Google into putting a software keyboard logger inbetween 1 & 2 and another output logger between 4 & 5?

Edit: I'm not saying this backdoor would be secure btw. Of course it wouldn't. But that seems to me a separate issue than "breaking encryption"

bodge5000 2023-09-07 02:34 UTC link
That was certainly true for Boris, I can only imagine if he was in on it a lot of the other senior tories would have been as well.

That's obviously not a good thing at all, and also I would think illegal, but I guess at least it's encrypted. The irony.

owlbite 2023-09-07 05:36 UTC link
This is a right-wing Tory government. The same people who initiated the Brexit mess mainly because they wanted to opt out of human rights (sorry I mean "reclaim their sovereignty").
cookiengineer 2023-09-07 05:43 UTC link
Setting my personal opinion on this law proposal aside, I think that the UK legislation lost its teeth with Brexit. It's just loud barking for the sole purpose of getting CEOs on the table.

Imagine their influence if they would have stayed in the EU, and if France would have joined them (which they usually do when it comes to more governmental oversight of the executive branches of the government).

What scares me a little now is that there was a loss of balance, which is important for any democracy to make progress. And if Big Tech's reaction is always "well then we just pull out of your market(s)" then it's gonna be an empty threat after the third time.

I don't know how the reactions to these events will be like, but most likely we'll see an increase of propaganda press statements on "how bad secure messaging" is, trying to push the narrative into a different direction.

simonjgreen 2023-09-07 06:02 UTC link
FT is a conservative-centre aligned news outlet, so stands to reason they'd favour their preferred party
p-e-w 2023-09-07 06:06 UTC link
You're making it sound as if the headline was poorly written, perhaps by accident or by a poor writer.

I can assure you that isn't the case. Whoever wrote that headline is a copywriting genius. The headline conveys almost the exact opposite of what really happened, without being factually wrong.

That doesn't happen by accident.

j0ej0ej0e 2023-09-07 06:20 UTC link
lol the uk gov has more negative connotations than bigtech.

Also not quite democratic when the uk electorate last voted for a gov in 2019 but we have had 3 prime ministers since all with vastly different strategies, where the last 2 were chosen by anyone who wants to pay for a membership to the tory party, including fake identities made by journalists who registered from france.

If you had some context, bigtech are actually fighting to keep encryption alive and are the goodies in this story.

Context is important, so is reading. But thanks for your insight in the article you didn't read.

dewclin 2023-09-07 07:50 UTC link
Similar story (no pun intended) in The Guardian [1]:

> UK ministers seek to allay WhatsApp and Signal concerns in encryption row

Nothing to see here folks, just a minor dispute between the Gov and two companies ...

[1] https://www.theguardian.com/media/2023/sep/06/whatsapp-signa...

stephen_g 2023-09-07 08:39 UTC link
Basically all of the secure messaging platforms have indicated that they will pull out of the UK rather than weaken the security model, if or when they are instructed to. That hasn’t changed either. What this may be politically is a way of the Government saying they won’t actually do it, while pretending that nothing has changed to make it look like it’s not a U-turn and pretending they’re not backing down. Hence their eagerness to pretend nothing is different.

As long as the messaging platforms don’t change their commitment then celebrating a small acknowledgement from the Government that the bill is basically unworkable is not a huge issue.

pg_1234 2023-09-07 08:49 UTC link
With the way the law is going the UK could demand that Tech providers provide backdoors into end-to-end encryption.

The providers can refuse.

The UK can then demand that such apps are not available in the UK.

HOWEVER ... the providers can build WASM equivalents that run in the phones browser. These can be available elsewhere in the world, and there is no way to stop UK residents from installing them. If there is no other way to have end-to-end encrypted messaging, some provider WILL offer this ... and they'll make it pretty slick. You can try prosecute each user (not much chance of success).

Legislation that fights well implemented secrecy will always eventually loose, as the government becomes just one more hostile actor, which the tech is already set up to protect against.

If the government pushes too hard, all that happens is that encrypted messaging moves out of app stores into the open internet ... and then, not only can they not see the content, they can barely see who is using it.

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Supplementary Signals
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About: governmentcorporations
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accessible low jargon general
Audit Trail 9 entries
2026-02-28 13:28 model_divergence Cross-model spread 0.30 exceeds threshold (3 models) - -
2026-02-28 13:28 eval Evaluated by claude-haiku-4-5-20251001: -0.06 (Neutral)
2026-02-28 10:59 model_divergence Cross-model spread 0.30 exceeds threshold (2 models) - -
2026-02-28 10:59 eval_success Lite evaluated: Mild negative (-0.20) - -
2026-02-28 10:59 eval Evaluated by llama-4-scout-wai: -0.20 (Mild negative)
2026-02-28 10:59 rater_validation_warn Lite validation warnings for model llama-4-scout-wai: 0W 1R - -
2026-02-28 10:55 eval_success Lite evaluated: Mild positive (0.10) - -
2026-02-28 10:55 eval Evaluated by llama-3.3-70b-wai: +0.10 (Mild positive)
2026-02-28 10:55 rater_validation_warn Lite validation warnings for model llama-3.3-70b-wai: 0W 1R - -