What Apple Does and Doesn't Know About You
Daniel_Stuckey writes "Tucked inside Apple's first-ever transparency report, published yesterday, was a not-so-subtle dig at the tech giant's competitors. 'Our business does not depend on collecting personal data,' Apple wrote. 'We have no interest in amassing personal information about our customers.' It's no secret that for social web companies like Google or Facebook, collecting, storing, and analyzing data about every aspect of your life translates into cold, hard cash—the more sensitive and personal, the better. But in the emerging post-NSA new world order, the unwritten privacy-for-cool services agreement that drives the internet ecosystem is making netizens increasingly uneasy."
Put the cash on the table for an iPhone or iPad: your deal is done. Get "free" Facebook, Google, etc. and your private information is how they make their money.
I'm happier paying up front and leaving the store with no parasites attached to me.
Trolling is a art,
...in the emerging post-NSA new world order, the unwritten privacy-for-cool services agreement that drives the internet ecosystem is making netizens increasingly uneasy...
"emerging"
"post-"
"NSA"
"new world order"
"unwritten agreement"
"services"
"privacy"
"meaningless-hyphenation"
"drive"
"internet ecosystem"
"netizens"
They advertise. Companies pay more for targeted ads which you can't offer if you don't use analytics.
http://www.red-sweater.com/blog/153/apple-phones-home-too
https://www.apple.com/privacy/
When you share your content with family and friends using Apple products, send gift certificates and products, or invite others to join you on Apple forums, Apple may collect the information you provide about those people such as name, mailing address, email address, and phone number.
When you create an Apple ID, register your products, apply for commercial credit, purchase a product, download a software update, register for a class at an Apple Retail Store, or participate in an online survey, we may collect a variety of information, including your name, mailing address, phone number, email address, contact preferences, and credit card information.
Good people go to bed earlier.
We'll just purchase it from Google/Facebook since everyone's so keen on posting up everything they do in their lives everywhere.
If you were me, you'd be good lookin'. - six string samurai
Paraphrased from within the link, "We have a lot of privacy information, we just don't connect it together." How flattering Apple, you know, this reminds me of (insert country here) that is collecting a ton of (insert commodity here). They don't plan to use it of course. They just like collecting it, and doing nothing interesting with it. No, nothing special all. Isn't that right, Apple? Or, should I say, Big BrApple?!?! (Terrible joke, I know)
Just because Apple hasn't explicitly tied a name to the information doesn't mean it's anonymous. Even a fragment of the location data is enough to identify most people.
The point is no longer "What $COMPANY does with the data it collects", though that might be unsettling on its own, it's what the NSA (or any other data aggregator) can do with it.
Why do I need a Apple account to download free apps?
Where is the '-1, Factually Incorrect' mod when you need it?
1) Yes, all Apple devices now prompt for an AppleID when you first turn them on. There is a 'Skip' button that you apparently completely missed, though. It is not a hidden button.
2) Apparently you were unable to do a simple Google search to figure out how to create an iTunes Store account without a credit card. Apple has posted directions.
Or does reality not fit with the bad image you want to have of Apple?
- (c) 2018 Hank Zimmerman
I'm completely OK with invasive privacy violations as long as we use that power to hunt down and imprison anyone who uses the term 'netizens'.
You could not find the "Skip" button on this screen?
http://cdn.tutsplus.com/mac.tutsplus.com/authors/john-winter/appleID-Mac.jpg
Those instructions are either out of date or just plain wrong. I just tried to go through those steps and when I get to step 11 (of 17!) the "none" option is not available. I can either cancel or enter a credit card number.
"your deal is done" ?? No way. 'Cause once you've entered the evil empire, you'll just want more. iPad, iPhone 3, iPhone 4, iPad 2, iPhone 5c, iPhone 5s, AirMac. It never ends :-)
Wierd, none was there for me, and my account payment information shows as 'no information on file'
You can also creat an apple-id on the website. The linked article mentions all apple-id's are the same/shared. You can register for free with no payment info at the developer site:
https://developer.apple.com/register/index.action
Click 'create id' and it will take you to the appleid site for your country, here is a link to the US one that does not ask for payment info:
https://appleid.apple.com/cgi-bin/WebObjects/MyAppleId.woa/wa/createAppleId?localang=en_US&appId=632&returnURL=http%3A%2F%2Fdeveloper.apple.com/register/completeRegistration.action
Where is the '-1, Factually Incorrect' mod when you need it?
I don't know because I'd love to apply it to your post given that your information is way out of date and you haven't bothered to check.
Yeah, like Apple would forgo an opportunity to earn money, simply because they also earn money elsewhere. They may not be desperate to make money from the data they collect, but they would be stupid (in the "maximum shareholder value" frame of reference) not to benefit from it as much as possible.
Thanks to Snowden the world now understands what telcos, OS and hardware makers like to do. :)
Enjoy your computer games, surfing for sport, celeb news, tech news and music.
They sold you junk encryption so enjoy their junk OS and enjoy feeding back to that powerful tracking everyday.
Any real creativity can be done on other OS, well understood hardware and with quality emerging crypto.
Consume tracked digital culture in a random yet bland way
The other interesting aspect is now watching the flood of skilled sock puppets to reinvent their US bosses and US brands pasts.
They did not know in any way, the court "accounts impacts" tally, are so legal and very public too. The companies understand privacy.
The US gov somehow got deep into their infrastructure or just outside it but where never helped by the brands staff.
Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
Where is the '-1, Factually Incorrect' mod when you need it?
1) Yes, all Apple devices now prompt for an AppleID when you first turn them on. There is a 'Skip' button that you apparently completely missed, though. It is not a hidden button.
When you hit "skip", it gives you a warning that you won't be able to use the App store. So you have to enter your information even to get free apps, even though they have "no interest in amassing personal information about [their] customers"
2) Apparently you were unable to do a simple Google search to figure out how to create an iTunes Store account without a credit card. Apple has posted directions.
True.
Notably, the first step in those directions is signing up for the App store. So you have to enter your information, even though they have "no interest in amassing personal information about [their] customers"
Having a workaround posted online somewhere seems less intuitive than having a simple "Would you like to link your credit card to this account? YES/NO" prompt during setup. It's almost as if they actually do want the private data they have "no interest in".
Or does reality not fit with the bad image you want to have of Apple?
They have "no interest" in the data. Their business doesn't "depend on" the data.
Why do they collect it anyway?
Seems to me they've given the other companies a decent excuse, while saying they themselves -don't- have an excuse.
Note to author: Your link in step 2 requires an AppleID, which you said you didn't need in step 1.
Do a simple Google search? Like I'm going to tell THEM that I want a secret iTunes account.
I set up an AppleID for my mum a few months back with no creditcard attached. I used a giftcard to download a few bits of software for her and it all worked fine.
If only there was a way to tell Google to stop asking for a mobile number. I don't want to give it to them, and my parents don't have one at all (at it bugs my dad who then complains to me about it).
Sara
Designer, Gamer, Macgrrl in an XP World
People are refuting the facts you posted. Fact is, I have never created an Apple account before. Never. Following your link, I found that the directions contained in the link are in fact somewhat outdated. But - using that link, I found the information necessary to create a new account, using fictitious information, and NO CREDIT CARD NUMBER had to be submitted. As a result of testing the validity of your post, I now have an account with which I might download "stuff", without ever paying for anything. Hell - I'm gonna go poke around, and see if they have anything that I'm even interested in. Do they have free music? Guess I'll find out . . . .
"Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
Note to poster: those aren't steps. They're two separate points: (1) that an Apple ID is not necessary to use the device and (2) that a credit card is not necessary to use an Apple ID.
If you want to use an iTunes account, then yes, you'll have to create an account with Apple. Shocking, I know.
I officially gave up on Apple(TM) products in 1988
They are required, by law, to NOT to report secret NSA 'requests'. That's why they are 'secret'. Nobody will ever really know how much information they hand over to the government because nobody is allowed to talk about it. All this reporting of request counts is nothing more than another distraction.
Just think about it.
That statement from Apple doesn't even pass the laugh test, let alone a sniff test.
I live and work in Silicon Valley, and have a substantial number of friends and former co-workers that either are, or have recently, worked for Apple.
They're collecting data on you. Lots of it. And their "opt out" ways are about as effective as Google's at protecting your data.
iTunes play patterns, and purchase history. Apple Maps. Location data around phone usage. Location usage, period. Apple Store purchase patterns. Every time you visit an Apple Store. Purchase data from the on-line Apple App Store. The list goes on and on.\
Some of it anonymized, but most of it really isn't. Even if you "opt out", there's more than enough metadata being collected to identify you.
So, yeah, Apple's just lying through it's teeth.
There are always four sides to every story: your side, their side, the truth, and what really happened.
They held out longer than some others, but Apple now cooperates in spying on their customers.
What you'll find out (unless it's changed) is that while you can *create* an account without a credit card, in order to use any of the services (download music, apps, etc) you need billing info of some sort, even if the stuff is free. However, this can be in the form of a gift certificate and doesn't need to be a credit card. You can even create accounts under fictitious names in countries other than the one you live in, as long as you have a gift certificate valid in that country to link to the account. Note: you can't buy a gift certificate for a different country from Apple (Amazon allows it). There are, however, ways around that by trusting your money to a third party for an international gift certificate.
Prönnnnnnnnnn
If you pay for something, that something is the product.
If you do NOT pay for something, then YOU are the product.
Apple may collect that information, but as Apple said, their business does not depend on the sale of that info. Selling access to you is not core to their business, like FB and Google.
They'd be stupid if they didn't collect that information. You're a 5 digit ID - can't you tell the difference between "we don't care about selling your data" and "your data is what we sell?"
You hate a company because you received one of their devices as a gift, and when you completely fucking broke it in a stupid way, it wasn't easy to take apart and uselessly futz with? Get off my lawn.
If only we _were_ in a "post-NSA new world order".
Pete Boyd
That.
I installed Mavericks on my Mac Mini last week.
Clean install, no Bluetooth, no personal information given, no smartphone connected and obviously no GPS.
Just localhost login and WiFi password.
I wanted to take a look at Apple Maps and clicked on "Your location" to see if it would get my city right.
Well, the map was zoomed at 20 on my balcony, with the exact address.
It took me a while to understand how they did it.
That.
I installed Mavericks on my Mac Mini last week.
Clean install, no Bluetooth, no personal information given, no smartphone connected and obviously no GPS.
Just localhost login and WiFi password.
I wanted to take a look at Apple Maps and clicked on "Your location" to see if it would get my city right.
Well, the map was zoomed at 20 on my balcony, with the exact address.
It took me a while to understand how they did it.
IP based geolocation? Third party providers gave een doing this for ages... they get the data from telcos.
Andy Warhol got it right / Everybody gets the limelight
Andy Warhol got it wrong / Fifteen minutes is too long.
You had a list of revenue figures. You worked out the gross profit from one of the sectors, then renamed 'gross profit' to 'revenue' and compared that 'revenue' back with the actual revenue figures in the original list.
You are either a quite talented troll or a complete idiot. Either compare revenue with revenue, or work out the gross profit for each product. Hint: the margins are high for the hardware compared to the rest of the industry, but not as high as the iTunes 30%.
Note also that 'cost of sales' for non iTunes software and services is much lower than 70% of revenue, therefore your assumption that it is all iTunes is somewhat aggressive in reducing the gross profit.
I like your search engine, I like youtube, I like gmail and your apps. I don't like that information about me is basically the product you are actually selling however. I would *love* to pay (as long as it's reasonably priced of course) for your services and for you to not have an incentive to collect more information about me than you really need.
Yes you're right, and it's arguably even worse than that. I'm not accusing Apple of this, because I have no evidence but I'm putting it out there because it's still a possibility. It's possible that when companies make such claims they are just weasel words such that to have some degree of certainty that the implied meaning is identical to the exact meaning, you need a far more explicit statement of fact than something general like that.
I know for a fact that "We don't connect the dots" can sometimes simply be shorthand for "We don't connect the dots. We pay someone else to do that for us and give us back the resultant information we ask for" because I've worked before for a company that did exactly this and used that exact disclaimer.
"We don't connect the dots" was technically true, but in practice it made no difference morally or ethically because they were still obtaining the exact same information they would have if they'd just done the analytics in house rather than outsourcing it.
In the UK (and Europe) data protection law even makes explicit provision for this precisely because it's not uncommon. This is why you have the terms "data controller" and "data processor" in the Data Protection Act because although a company can't legally pass over control of personal data they hold on you without your permission, they can pass it on to an outsourcing provider for processing providing the company processing it only processes it and doesn't otherwise disseminate or use it. The company that collects and holds your data is the data controller, but that doesn't mean they're not passing it on, they could well be passing it to a different company that acts as the data processor.
If Apple only makes their money selling hardware, how about opening up the OS to allow people to install anything they want?
Because Apple does not actually make their profits selling hardware. People have a hard time wrapping their head around this but Apple is fundamentally a software company. Nobody would pay a premium for a Macintosh that runs Windows. Put Windows on a Mac and you'd have a hard time distinguishing it from a Dell without looking at the label on the front. Nobody would pay extra for an iPhone or iPad running Android. Apple's software is what people actually pay for and what makes their products different. Apple's business model is just a sort of backwards razor and blades model. Instead of selling you a cheap handle and expensive blades they sell you expensive hardware (the handle) and give the software (the blades) away cheap to get lock in. Apple's business model doesn't work if they are not selling a bundled product. If Apple just sold you the hardware without any software they would be out of business faster than you could say "shareholder lawsuit".
The difference between Apple and Google is that Google's actual product is YOU. Google makes their money by providing information about you to advertisers. Apple might do this too but that is incidental to their business model which is to sell you a piece of bundled technology. Advertising versus Consumer Electronics. The difference is not always obvious but it is a huge difference.
Give you a all a hint: This indicates that apple does make money tracking you.
That's what I though too. But I really don't think that would give you an exact location with 5m accuracy.
Apple has a database with WiFi Router MAC Addresses linked to coordinates, thanks to so many people having IPhones in the neighboorhood.
Lets remember their statement for a few years in the future to see if they ring true.
1) Yes, all Apple devices now prompt for an AppleID when you first turn them on. There is a 'Skip' button that you apparently completely missed, though. It is not a hidden button.
Just saying: And it is a very, very useful feature indeed. You enter your Apple ID, start downloading stuff, and very soon your new device is set up exactly like the previous one, with all the apps that you had, calendar, contacts, email, and so on and so on.
I'm surprised no one brought up the fact that Apple dropped a Patriot Act dead man's switch into their report:
"Apple has never received an order under Section 215 of the USA Patriot Act. We would expect to challenge such an order if served on us."
I browse on +1 so AC's need not respond, I won't see it.
For example: Years ago it was found that Apple stored location data unencrypted "on its devices". No, they didn't. Their software stored location data on the user's device. Unaccessible to Apple. (And since the data originally came _from Apple_, all the nutters who claimed that Apple put the data there for some nefarious purpose were just nutters. If Apple wanted to keep track of this data, they would have made a copy on their servers).
You can of course store lots of your data on Apple's servers, but that's not "personal data" where some privacy policy applies, it's "my f***ing data and none of your f***ing business". And then there is the data that any normal business would gather about you, that represents your interaction with the company.
into the advertising business when they release the i4...
And hide away the opt out on their website.
LOL, troll company is troll.
I don't think Apple's comment meant that they don't collect ANY information, of course they do. Anyone who runs any kind of online service wants to know know its users are and how they use the service, it helps improve and streamline it. I don't have a problem with that; If I sign up there's a certain expectation that the information I enter and the accesses I make will be logged for their own purposes. Some companies, however, have so many services that are so popular that your average internet user is almost certainly going to use them - sometimes whether they realize it or not. Or the services might be tied to a device, like Apple's or Google's. This is the class of service and data collection that is concerning to me. When it comes to those, "connecting the dots" is very much the important part.
When deciding what kind of dot connecting a particular company may be doing, I just follow the money. Does Apple have a reason to determine every little thing about me? Do they want to know if I eat eggs or breakfast? Or drive a Ford? Does having that information help them to make money?
Now ask the same question of Google. Personally I don't want to use an operating system that's written by an ad company because I know they'll do everything they can to connect my dots. I don't believe Apple has as much incentive to do so.
Apple doesn't (or didn't). They buy the data from other companies like Skyhook that go around and get it. They also don't have MAC addresses. They have SSIDs, which are broadcast to the world.
Google went around collecting SSIDs, which is fine, but they managed to get rather a lot of other information (which they kept) in the trawl, which was judged to be not okay.
Apple doesn't (or didn't). They buy the data from other companies like Skyhook that go around and get it. They also don't have MAC addresses. They have SSIDs, which are broadcast to the world.
Google went around collecting SSIDs, which is fine, but they managed to get rather a lot of other information (which they kept) in the trawl, which was judged to be not okay.
This is true but in response to BlackPignouf: If the device you're talking about is using a fixed line (ie. not WiFi or cellular) then the telco's know you're exact address afterall it's their cabling and DHCP/subnet that provides the address.
As for your 5m radius ... depends upon the size of your house I guess :)
Andy Warhol got it right / Everybody gets the limelight
Andy Warhol got it wrong / Fifteen minutes is too long.
If it's a fixed line the telcos better not be giving out your address. I suppose it's possible, but that would be a major privacy violation and would be very illegal here in Canada.
It's most likely the OP had his wifi on (possibly he was even connected via it) and his mac used wifi localization to get his estimated position. The accuracy ("my balcony") was either an exaggeration or a coincidence. Wifi positioning gets my position pretty close (the apartment across the hall) but it puts you there no matter where in the building you are.
If it's a fixed line the telcos better not be giving out your address. I suppose it's possible, but that would be a major privacy violation and would be very illegal here in Canada.
It's most likely the OP had his wifi on (possibly he was even connected via it) and his mac used wifi localization to get his estimated position. The accuracy ("my balcony") was either an exaggeration or a coincidence. Wifi positioning gets my position pretty close (the apartment across the hall) but it puts you there no matter where in the building you are.
Not sure what the deal is in Canada but here in Australia the telco's are theoretically bound by similar rules... doesn't stop the fuckers though.... what's the point of having laws if they're not going to enforce them?
Andy Warhol got it right / Everybody gets the limelight
Andy Warhol got it wrong / Fifteen minutes is too long.
Hell, just to make my damn phone work I need an iTunes subscription. That ties my phone to my credit card. Then they start spamming me with music suggesting software. They provide software so that police can remotely suck all the data off it. They release back doors so that even if my company remotely bricks it, I can restore my last backup and keep running.
I think its fair to say, Apple's business model very much relies on them being able to collect user data, or to connect users to ways they can share data.
If what they say is true, the iPhone would be an open platform that let me install what I wanted, rather than existing in this walled Apple Only Garden
...while they claim not to store data on you, they're able to produce data on you when asked by authorities. I call bullshit on their "report"
There are 2 groups of people you can make fun of on the Internet without fear of attack. The illiterate, and the Amish.
http://support.apple.com/kb/PH12117
"... If you use OS X Mavericks v.10.9 or later, your contacts, calendars, and other info are updated on your computers and iOS devices via iCloud..."
Many users are angry at this requirement for privacy, connection, etc. reasons like on https://discussions.apple.com/message/23444199 ...
Ant(Dude) @ Quality Foraged Links (AQFL.net) & The Ant Farm (antfarm.ma.cx / antfarm.home.dhs.org).