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by kashprime 2013 days ago
I'm moving away from Android (after 10 years) to iOS for exactly this reason. Not much sympathy for FB on my end.
1 comments

As a general tech enthusiast I jump back and forth between both ecosystems fairly often, but I have to wonder what's the point? If I'm not running any social media applications what do I have to fear from google not yet having this level of privacy toggling.
Just because you aren't running Facebook doesn't mean they aren't in your device. Many apps and sites contain Facebook libraries for logins, sharing, advertising, and analytics. If they include any of those, you are automatically sending data back to Facebook. With the way things are currently setup, Facebook can easily tie your activity in one app to your activity in another app. And as we have known for years now, Facebook creates "shadow profiles" for users it can't identify and attempts to tie those shadow profiles to real life people through the actions of their friends on Facebook and its other products.

So even if you use no social media whatsoever, Facebook is still compiling data on you. And this change in iOS will greatly limit their ability to do so (or at least increase the work necessary to accomplish it).

Frankly, it has me considering switching to iOS as well after running Android for over a decade.

It's a really good point; what really got me was Facebook being impossible to remove from my Samsung device (S8+) without rooting. Likely due to their tie-up with Oculus. I find the uncannily appropriate ads being served fairly disturbing, and an invasion of privacy. It's going to be a real challenge transferring data and settings though...
Apple App Store rules (will?) explicitly ban all kinds of tracking without permission. If you try, your app will quickly follow Fortnite to the abyss of banland.

The tracking permission is an OS level popup with strict rules on when, how and how often to display. The default is opt-out, it's up to the app maker to give users the incentive to allow tracking.