The British government is demanding that Apple and other tech companies implement technical measures to prevent children from sending and receiving nude images. What's being overlooked is that precisely such a protection feature has been built into iOS for years – and is even enabled by default for children.
Britain has long been pressing Apple to do more to protect children using technology. The company first came under scrutiny from authorities in early 2025 when it withdrew its enhanced iCloud encryption in the country instead of installing a government-issued backdoor. Now comes the next demand, this time with even more force: devices should prevent minors from sending or receiving sexually explicit images. However, the child protection measures the government is demanding are already a reality on the iPhone.
What the British government is demanding
In a speech at London Tech Week on Monday, Prime Minister Keir Starmer called on technology companies to introduce device controls that would prevent children from sending and receiving sexually explicit images. He described this as a perfectly achievable goal.
Specifically, according to a Reuters report, Apple, Google, and other major providers should provide or activate features on smartphones and tablets that detect nudity. Such content would be blocked for children, while adults could still view it after age verification. The demand is part of a broader government strategy against violence against women and girls and follows the resignation last month of the minister responsible for child protection, who had accused the government of insufficient commitment.
From request to threat of legislation
Currently, this is just an appeal: the government expects companies to implement the controls voluntarily. If they fail to do so, it intends to make them legally obligated to do so. The deadline being discussed is September.
According to reports about the proposed laws, the end result could be fines and – in the most far-reaching interpretation – personal liability for executives. However, in practice, fines are likely to be more realistic than criminal penalties.
Apple already has the technology on board
What the debate largely ignores is that Apple has long offered a solution to precisely this problem. With iOS 15.2, the company introduced Communications Security, which detects and blurs nude images in the Messages app. It is enabled by default for children's and teenagers' accounts. iOS 17 added a Sensitive Content Warning feature, allowing adults to also hide such images from themselves.
In both cases, the detection works entirely on the device: Machine learning checks photos and videos before anyone sees them – without the content ever reaching Apple. This applies not only to images in messages, which are automatically blurred and require explicit confirmation to view, but also to FaceTime calls, video messages, shared albums, images received via AirDrop, and even contact posters. Parents can also manage this feature specifically via parental controls in Screen Time. This means that communication security already largely meets London's requirements – by default and only overridable after explicit confirmation.
Lessons learned from 2021
Apple's cautious approach to this issue has a history. In 2021, the company announced a comprehensive suite of parental control features – including, in addition to communication security, a scan of photos stored in iCloud for child sexual abuse material. Following massive criticism from security researchers and privacy advocates, Apple backtracked and removed the references to iCloud scanning, which it later abandoned altogether. Communication security, however, remained and has since been gradually expanded.
The question remains: what is the scope?
The main question is whether Apple's existing solution goes far enough for lawmakers. In the most stringent scenario, the age verification would have to be extended to more apps to cover a wider range of content – a system-wide block that also applies to third-party apps by default would indeed be a new development for iOS. Most recently, Apple did expand the protection in iOS 26.1 by adding filters for 13- to 17-year-olds in FaceTime, Messages, and AirDrop. The core functionality is therefore less a new development than a question of scope. How far a future law will go and whether it raises the same data privacy concerns as previous British initiatives will only become clear once a concrete draft is available. (Image: Shutterstock / Mistervlad)
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