• Interesting post about Apple spying on its customers

    From Andrews@21:1/5 to All on Sat Oct 26 05:20:07 2024
    The post below is not from me, but it was posted on Android when people (rightly so) complained that Google made Precise Location Services the
    default in Android 15.

    Most people don't have a clue how to turn it off, so, for them, it's
    permanent Google spyware - which - for idiots - it is - because they can't figure out how to turn it off (which is why Google did it).

    But what's interesting about this post for you is what it says about Apple.
    <https://www.novabbs.com/computers/article-flat.php?id=55113&group=comp.mobile.android#55113>

    ====< post is below in its entirety >====

    I think that with Google you have to assume that if they can spy,
    they will. And they will lie about it. It's what they do. They didn't make Android out of sheer generosity. It's part of their "all spying, all the
    time"
    business model.

    Cellphones these days are semi-kiosk devices, not intended to be
    controlled. I installed a program to give me more control. I've forgotten
    the name now. (Netguard, maybe?) The list of formerly invisible Android processes that it showed me was endless, but most of them have
    meaningless names. Only an Android developer could make sense of it.

    You should assume that if your phone is powered on then you're
    wearing a tracking collar. Whether it's phone towers or satellite GPS,
    they're tracking your movements. If using a cellphone is part of your
    lifestyle (you leave it powered on, send and receive text messages, etc)
    then you're the same as the wild animals with radio collars that biologists track. You can't have cellphone lifestyle and privacy.

    Do you remember the "wifi slurping" scandal several years back?
    Google was picking up and storing any tidbits they could get from
    unencrypted wifi as their streetview vans drove around. Most wifi
    back then was unencrypted. Google heartily denied it, until the specific software was found that they wrote to do the job! If I remember correctly,
    I think the software developer came forward.

    It seems odd that Google would bother to collect random tidbits
    from specific houses, but the magic of surveillance is in the data
    crunching. Every tiny bit of data they can get just adds to the
    data they can analyze.

    Baldfaced lying is routine with tech companies. They
    don't face any real punishment for lying, stealing and spying. Apple
    are no better than Google. They've been caught spying multiple times.
    Some years ago there was a California journalist who found precise
    location data going back several weeks, stored in a plain text
    file on his iPhone. He used the data to create a map, to show how
    easy it is to track a person's life. Apple also lies about the iPhone
    privacy settings:

    https://gizmodo.com/apple-iphone-analytics-tracking-even-when-off-app-store-1849757558

    The only difference is that most people using iPhones believe that
    Apple is a special angel created by Lord Jobs and they actually want
    to be tracked by their phone. It makes them feel safe.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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