Bruce Sewell, general counsel for Apple said yesterday during a hearing on encryption convened by House Committee on Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations.
"We have been asked by the Chinese government, we refused," Sewell said, adding that the request was made within the past two years.
Testifying before the Congressional committee, Sewell said strong encryption is the best way to protect the information.
"The government agrees. Encryption today is the backbone of our cyber security infrastructure, and provides the very best defence we have against increasingly hostile attacks.
"The US has spent tens of millions of dollars through the Open Technology Fund and other programmes to fund strong encryption," he said.
Sewell said administration's review group on intelligence and communications technology urged the US Government to fully support, and not in any way to subvert, undermine or weaken generally available commercial encryption software.
"At Apple, with every release of hardware and software, we advance the safety, security and data protection features in our products. We work hard also to assist law enforcement, because we share their goal of creating a safer world," he said.
"We feel strongly Americans will be better off if we can offer the very best protections for their digital lives," he said.
"We have not provided the source code to the Chinese government. We did not have a key 19 months ago that we threw away. We have not announced that we're going to apply pass code encryption to the next generation iCloud," he said responding to an allegation.
Apple resisted the order, and the government ultimately dropped the case, saying that it had bought a product from a third party that helped it get data off the device.
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