| > Users worried about their privacy can always choose not to use it. You make it look like it's easy for the normal Apple user to switch to Android. In fact it's quite the opposite and the whole situation is even worse because most of them won't even be aware of the dangers. The major reasons for people I know to chose an IPhone over an Android is the "ease of use" (resulting from the fact that their first smart phone was an IPhone already and they never tried anything different) and because they are "so confused with all the options/apps/general possibilities on Android". Those are the people who need to be especially protected. They are caged within a locked environment of a single US company. This alone should make you think. > But really, nearly everyone shares images of themselves online, so even that's of dubious value. This sentence together with this high tech approach you demonstrate on the rest of the comment is mind-boggling. As it's the most common approach of companies/individuals to abolish digital privacy all together. The old version of it was "I'm not afraid of X because I have nothing to hide". Horrifying, but now I understand where your attitude comes from. Being born in a oppressive state, this is where I would actually use the word "stupid". > I'd challenge you to find any security expert who agrees that Face ID as Apple implements it can realistically... As I've wrote above. It may be that FaceID is not a big deal right now. We don't know it for sure since it's all locked down but we assume it. There is however still the ARKit and all those APIs using those depth/facial mapping capabilities. Those becoming the new standard for popular apps is just a matter of time and since you've already given rights to use the camera, those features will be (or are already?) a nice extra. So you see...we don't even need to reach out to possible changes from the paranoid government governing Apple and their data under and awaiting some patch to allow the access to FaceID data. It's far more accessible. I wonder, would you allow your phone to take a drop of blood for authentication or where does your privacy actually start? |
No, I'm saying Face ID is not mandatory on an iPhone X. You can use a passcode.
Nor am I saying privacy should be sacrificed on the altar of technology. I do my best to stay away from Google, and I try not to let Facebook know any more about me than necessary (and every day I contemplate ditching it, but there are a few important reasons to stick around).
There are plenty of ways to do biometric security wrong from a privacy standpoint. I trust Apple to do an earnest job of doing it right, because they have positive incentives to work for their user base rather than being a data collection/ad selling company.
And if biometrics aren't where you wish to place your faith, you can simply not enable the feature.