Apple delays plan to scan US iPhones for child sex abuse images after criticism
- The company said it would take more time to collect input before releasing important child safety features
- Apple’s promise last month to check iPhones in the US for child sex abuse images sparked a backlash from rights groups

Apple’s promise last month to check US customer phones and computers for child sex abuse images sparked a global backlash from a wide range of rights groups, with employees also criticising the plan internally.
Critics argued the feature could be exploited by repressive governments looking to find other material for censorship or arrests and would also be impossible for outside researchers to determine whether Apple was only checking a small set of on-device content.
Apple countered that it would allow security researchers to verify its claims, but the company on Friday said it would take more time to make changes to the system.
“Based on feedback from customers, advocacy groups, researchers and others, we have decided to take additional time over the coming months to collect input and make improvements before releasing these critically important child safety features,” the company said in a statement.
Matthew Green, a cybersecurity researcher at Johns Hopkins University, who had criticised Apple’s move, said the company’s decision was “promising.”
Green said on Twitter that Apple should “be clear about why you’re scanning and what you’re scanning. Going from scanning nothing [but email attachments] to scanning everyone’s private photo library was an enormous delta. You need to justify escalations like this.”