Apple confirms it now uses Google Cloud for iCloud services
![]() Apple has confirmed that it uses Google’s public cloud to store data for its iCloud services in its latest version of the iOS Security Guide last month, as spotted by CNBC. Reports that Apple relied on Google’s cloud services surfaced in 2016 but were previously never confirmed. Apple had previously used remote data storage systems provided by Amazon Web Services and Microsoft Azure. Apple’s edition of the iOS Security Guide in March 2017 still listed Microsoft Azure instead of Google Cloud Platform. The new edition describes its iCloud service: “The encrypted chunks of the file are stored, without any user-identifying information, using third-party storage services, such as [Amazon] S3 and Google Cloud Platform.” The report doesn’t clearly state whether Apple uses any Google cloud services outside of storing photos and videos, nor does it give a start date for when Apple first made the switch. Apple and Google did not immediately respond to comment. |
China’s commercial Mach-4 drone tipped to make first flight next year
101323.01.2025, 19:38'We're racing to launch': Exploration to soar under Trump and Musk, space firm boss says
77420.01.2025, 22:02China runs final tests of hypersonic air-to-air missile in extreme Mars mission tunnel
80119.01.2025, 20:24First Baby Born Using Technology That Matures Eggs Outside the Body
148920.12.2024, 20:13SpaceX makes history as 'Mechazilla' successfully catches returning Starship booster (video)
262113.10.2024, 21:30The impact of COVID-19 on the debate on open science: a qualitative analysis of published materials from the period of the pandemic
244811.10.2024, 03:12