The Western Journal

Devastating Apple Admission: iCloud Service Is ‘Greatest Platform for Distributing Child Porn’ – Now WV Is Moving to Protect Those Kids

West Virginia’s attorney general filed a lawsuit against Apple, accusing the company of putting privacy ahead of child safety in its iCloud service. The suit cites internal Apple communications described by Reuters, including a former anti-fraud executive who reportedly called iCloud “the greatest platform for distributing child porn.” Apple responded by saying it is continually innovating to combat threats and maintain a safe platform for children, highlighting parental controls such as Interaction Safety.

The legal action questions iCloud’s encryption practices, noting that not all information on iCloud is end-to-end encrypted, even though Apple introduced optional end-to-end encryption in 2022.West Virginia contends Apple underreports CSAM,pointing to federal reporting requirements and contrasting Apple’s numbers with those of Google and Meta. The case seeks federal involvement, arguing the issue should be addressed at a national level. The article also places Apple’s broader context,including Forbes naming it the world’s most valuable brand in 2025,while underscoring calls to curb the distribution of harmful material.


West Virginia is going after Apple as a completely evil admission has come to light: Its services are widely used for child pornography.

The statement comes from internal communications between Apple employees about the iCloud service. Reuters reported Thursday that a former company anti-fraud chief called this software “the greatest platform for distributing child porn.”

That day, West Virginia Attorney General John B. McCuskey filed a lawsuit, alleging the company puts privacy above the safety of children. “These images are a permanent record of a child’s trauma, and that child is victimized every time the material is d or viewed,” he said.

Apple made its own statement.

The company says it is “innovating every day to combat ever-evolving threats and maintain the safest, most trusted platform for kids.

“All of our industry-leading parental controls and features, like Communication Safety — which automatically intervenes on kids’ devices when nudity is detected on Messages, d Photos, AirDrop and even live FaceTime calls — are designed with the safety, security, and privacy of our users at their core.”

Although iCloud reportedly does not use end-to-end encryption for all information d, which would put it outside the reach of investigators and the company, the lawsuit focuses on this tool for what Reuters calls a “move toward” it.

PC Magazine clarified that in 2022, iCloud introduced optional end-to-end encryption.

Clearly, something must be done.

In May 2025, Forbes ranked Apple the most valuable brand in the world for the fourth straight year.

This is a company so massive, with software and hardware in millions of homes across the globe, and its cloud service is known for one thing: evil, disgusting, criminal perversions.

For every day this goes on, Apple executives are making money off of children being abused and having their lives ruined.

McCuskey’s office says this case is the first of its kind. According to a news release, McCuskey commented, “Preserving the privacy of child predators is absolutely inexcusable.

“And more importantly, it violates West Virginia law. Since Apple has so far refused to police themselves and do the morally right thing, I am filing this lawsuit to demand Apple follow the law, report these images, and stop re-victimizing children by allowing these images to be stored and d.”

In that same release, McCuskey’s office indicated it appears Apple is massively underreporting child porn on its platforms.

“Federal law requires all technology companies based in the U.S. to report detected CSAM to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC). In 2023, Apple made just 267 such reports. By contrast, Google filed 1.47 million reports and Meta filed more than 30.6 million. Apple’s failure to deploy available detection technology is not a passive oversight — it is a choice.”

The U.S. Department of Justice should be involved, not just one state.

This should be a major issue across the country.




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