this post was submitted on 24 Jul 2024
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AssholeDesign
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This is a community for designs specifically crafted to make the experience worse for the user. This can be due to greed, apathy, laziness or just downright scumbaggery.
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The irony of using Apple products, thinking "Private" means "private".
I'm surprised by how many people here buy into Apple's marketing. I thought people on Lemmy would be more aware.
Yeah... It's genuinely sad. 🤷🏽♂️😅
Bruh, can we not do the whole teasing people who prefer one brand's proprietary OS & interface over another?
Bruh, there's no brand whoring from me here. We're all products. Simmer. Bruh.
Do you think the advertising company’s phone is more private?
Google doesn’t make money when you buy a Samsung Galaxy. Google tracks everything you do on your Galaxy. They then take this data and sell targeted advertisement at you. Google makes money when they sell you to advertisers.
Apple makes money when you buy an iPhone.
At least on the advertising company's phone, I have the freedom to install a different, more privacy respecting OS like GrapheneOS.
Google offers an easy to use VPN and bountiful security controls.
So yes. Unless you can point out what your actually talking about instead of vague generalities.
Google VPN is now a member of Google Graveyard.
Google offers a VPN?
Damn, that is one of the last VPN services I would ever use, VPN services are in general idiotic with regards to privacy.
Apple appears to be double dipping. I don't use apple products beyond a MacBook. Why for example the laptop has a unique advertiser id (which looks like it can't even be disabled in newer os versions)?
A lot of the things stored in iCloud are end to end encrypted. That includes all of your messages and attachments in iMessage and all of your bookmarks in Safari. Apple simply can’t use those things to advertise at you.
As far as other targeted advertising, Apple doesn’t track you across apps. In other words, searching for something in the App Store won’t result in different ads in Apple News. And doing anything in any third party app won’t affect any targeted ads in any Apple app. (https://support.apple.com/guide/iphone/control-how-apple-delivers-advertising-to-you-iphf60a6a256/ios)
You will still see targeted ads on iOS in third party apps, because Google still tracks you in an app if it uses AdMob.
All OS have advertising ID. Windows does, macOS does (TIL from you), Android and iOS do. Linux doesn't for obvious reasons.
That is true of Android as well.
And remember that while iOS is built by a tech company first and foremost, Android is built by an advertisement company first and foremost.
I have tried both, and only Android gives me the feeling that someone is constantly looking over my shoulder.
I know Apple does also, but I don't get the same feeling.
I recently acquired a used iPad and its my first real iOS experience in a decade, and I have to say I have similar feelings from using it.
Many privacy controls are set to their tightest settings by default, many things require the app to ask the user before intruding then give you clear indication if and when they are intruding, and most controls that I might want to change aren't buried 4 layers deep in the settings.
However, I can't install uBlock Origin on Firefox (yet?) and there's quite a few minor customizations I'd really like to change but can't. And honestly Android's openness to sideloading sometimes lets me do things like load an old paid game that hasn't been updated in several years and sometimes does or doesn't work depending on the Android version and specifics of the vendor's implementation, or snag random stuff off Githubor Itch if I really want to.
Aurora Store instead of Play Store, Firefox with UbO and Adguard DNS. Android does look over my shoulder (why do I need to use ADB to disable uninstallable apps or install pre Android 6 apps?!) but not in the context of privacy.
I'm sure your feelings are more accurate than thousands of thousand security researchers trying to make a name for themselves.
This is more "Alexa is spying on me" ignorance and paranoia.
This entire thread...
Since there are so many security researchers agreeing with you, why didn't you link a few reports to support your claim?
Ahh right, the old disprove god doesn't exist argument. 👌👍
I'm sure Google and Amazon have secret whistleblower tech that has some how kept any evidence of this massive program secretly stealing everyone's data without leaving a trace.
YOU made the positive claim.
Whatever you say my man.
You seemed to claim that there are thousands of security researchers that have found that iOS monitors you more than Android, yet you offer no proof, only a shit attitude.
Sure I made a snarky remark, but my point still stands, you have no links to reports confirming your claim.
I was open to read about this, but your attitude has made me less so.
You've made up arguments and comparisons. Google services monitor you. Android (as stated earlier) or AOSP or even pixel os doesn't. There is a difference. The OS is quite locked down. Nobody is forcing you to use any Google services. I'm sorry you missed that nuance.
Exactly what argument did I make up?
Google is an advertisment company, this is a fact, Apple is a tech company, this is also a fact.
My own feelings are also a fact.
Meh, that's not a great argument to make.
Yes, Google is largely an advertising company. But they're also a tech company.
We can argue that Apple is a tech company first, but it's also an advertising company (they do collect gobs of data about users - which we really don't know much about how they use it).1
I could easily say they're both data collection companies with a massive tech side.
Not sure where I was going with all this, other than this isn't the clearest argument to make. And how you feel about it really isn't useful. I don't like any of them, though I feel worse when using iOS from the lack of transparency and inability to change much of anything. Root actually exists for Android, unlike iOS.
That is a fair take, but looking at it from a general user's perspective, they just want a phone that works, they won't tinker to get it working like they want.
In that regard I find the setup wizard on iOS and Android to have two very different personalities.
iOS guides you step by step, it talks about sharing user data and gives you controls to turn it off right in the wizard.
Last time I set up an Android phone, a Nokia 6.1, running Android One, Android was more of a "don't worry about privacy, just logon and have fun!" personality.
So for normal users, my reaction is that iOS is better.
You pay the premium price to feel better about the same thing.
You can literally sniff the fucking traffic and see that's not true. You understand there are laws of physics at play here and the devices can't sneak data/etc past them, right? Default android devices send significantly more data back to home base than a defaultly configured iOS device.
Quite possible
How do ya compare incentives of Apple/Cloudflare & the big box store in terms of data privacy?