Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Android
  4. Mobile
  5. News

Silent Circle pulls its warrant canary, says it’s a ‘business decision’

Add as a preferred source on Google

Silent Circle, the company best known for the secure Blackphone smartphone series, just removed its warrant canary — but the company says it was a business decision, and not because it has been served with a national security letter or warrant.

Most national security letters or surveillance warrants issued by the federal government come with a gag order that says the recipient cannot disclose the contents of the letter or its existence. A warrant canary is a popular method of getting around that: A company posts a message alerting its users that it has not received any warrants from the government — but if the message is removed or has not been updated, that means user data has been compromised and the company has a gag order placed on it.

Recommended Videos

Warrant canaries have been a popular tool used by many companies ever since the National Security Agency leaks by Edward Snowden in 2013. So naturally, when someone tipped off TechCrunch that Silent Circle quietly removed its warrant canary, it could be assumed that the company had received a national security letter or a warrant requesting user data from the government. Nope, the company says it is a “business decision.”

“We have not received a warrant for user data,” Silent Circle’s General Counsel Matt Neiderman told TechCrunch. “As part of our focus on delivering enterprise software platform, we discontinued our warrant canary some time ago. The decision was a business decision and not related to any warrant for user data, which we have not received.”

It’s not the first time the company has said it hasn’t received a request for user data — last year, Silent Circle said it forgot to add in a statement that it did not receive a national security letter or warrant in its warrant canary, but the company said it was simply an error and updated the canary to include it.

We have reached out to Silent Circle to see if they have received any type of warrant, and to get some additional comment on the situation. In this day and age where attacks on privacy get the spotlight, a warrant canary is a company’s way of communicating with its users. An encrypted communications firm removing its canary as a “business decision” is certainly strange, and we will update this post if we glean any new information.

Julian Chokkattu
Former Mobile and Wearables Editor
Julian is the mobile and wearables editor at Digital Trends, covering smartphones, fitness trackers, smartwatches, and more…
This Android lock screen bug lets anyone text using Gemini without knowing your PIN
Google confirms a fix is coming for this risky Gemini lock screen bug
google-gemini

Your Android lock screen is supposed to keep your messages safe, even if someone gets hold of your phone. But a newly discovered Gemini bug could do the opposite. Since May, The Register has received multiple reports of people bypassing device authentication on Android 16 devices that allow Gemini access straight from the lock screen.

The flaw lets anyone use Gemini to send SMS and even WhatsApp messages without ever entering your PIN. It only works under specific conditions, but it is serious enough that Google has confirmed a fix is already rolling out.

Read more
OnePlus is gone, and Android phones just became more boring in the US
OnePlus 13 vs OnePlus 11.

I wasn't expecting a smartphone brand's exit to hit me this hard, but OnePlus leaving the US and Europe genuinely did. The company has already confirmed that it will no longer launch new products in either market, although existing customers will continue receiving software updates and after-sales support. So while OnePlus isn’t disappearing altogether, it is walking away from two of the biggest smartphone markets in the world.

To be honest, the Android market in the US already feels limited. If you’re shopping for a flagship, your realistic choices almost always begin with Samsung and end with Google. OnePlus was one of the very few brands sitting in between, offering something that didn’t quite look or feel like everything else. And that’s exactly what I’m going to miss.

Read more
A niche iPhone browser quietly fixes my biggest problem with Google Search
Quiche Browser open on iPhone

If there's a new browser, email app, or note-taking app to try, chances are I've already installed it. Like every other productivity nerd, I'm always chasing the perfect setup. That's how I stumbled upon Quiche Browser. It was already close to replacing the Arc Search for me on the iPhone, but its latest update finally pushed it over the edge, earning it a spot as my default browser.

What makes Quiche so good

Read more