• DominusOfMegadeus@sh.itjust.works
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    8 months ago

    Family sharing your location reduces your privacy?! Who knew?! This article would be better if they could tell me what nefarious things Apple was up to with my data, but that’s not even mentioned in the article.

    • Nyfure@kbin.social
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      7 months ago

      We cant read Apples mind, so thats wishful thinking. But sending telemetry (even if hidden) means it can be used.
      Thats why e.g. Apple is using Differential Privacy for apps to use… to not have to give the Apps full access to e.g. usage data.
      Of course Apple themselves isnt necessarily bound to that system themselves, who knew…

      And why not allow other Apps to replace your default Apps if you want to? Why not have access to that Freedom?
      After all you should be able to do anything you want with your system… or maybe you dont believe in this kind of freedom. Could just buy an Android phone. Fuck the person who wants to actually own their hardware, right? How could they be so dumb and want actual freedom, haha.
      No, we play pretend while Freedom is further taken away under “Privacy” claims. Maybe that replacement battery will send your usage pattern via shortwave radio to an agent nearby…

  • AutoTL;DR@lemmings.worldB
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    8 months ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    “Our work shows that users may disable default apps, only to discover later that the settings do not match their initial preference,” the paper states.

    While users can ostensibly choose not to enable Siri in the initial setup on macOS-powered devices, it still collects data from other apps to provide suggestions.

    “Specifically, we discovered that steps required to disable features of default apps are largely undocumented and the data handling practices are not completely disclosed.”

    The authors also conducted a survey of Apple users and quizzed them on whether they really understood how privacy options worked on iOS and macOS, and what apps were doing with their data.

    Users were also tested on their knowledge of privacy settings for eight default apps – including Siri, Family Sharing, Safari, and iMessage.

    The researchers suggest replacing Apple’s jargon-filled privacy policy with descriptions that are in the settings menu itself, and maybe even providing some infographic illustrations as well.


    The original article contains 881 words, the summary contains 156 words. Saved 82%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!

  • panicnow@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    Surprisingly, I thought the article was a reasonable summary of the actual paper. I think some people might think this was a poke at privacy on Apple, but it really focused on how hard it is to create accessible settings despite the enormous number of options.

    I have found that navigating the menus in Apple iOS is quite a bit easier than on my Android devices. Mac seems more difficult as the settings tend to be inside the individual apps and don’t surface as well through the search.

    The paper hammered home the point that Siri configurations were particularly hard, but they also mention that Siri data is end-to-end encrypted. I thought all those points were fair.

    I do believe settings need to be improved, but I have little faith they will ever be useful for 99% of users who will simply never change anything from the default. At this point I believe any meaningful improvements for the majority of users will come from useful defaults that include E2E encryption on basically all user data. I feel Apple is coming close with iCloud Advanced Data Protection that was introduced last year, but that needs to become a default. Maybe it cannot though—too many users will lose all their data and then the trade off of security to convenience will not be worthwhile.