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by thebean11
1854 days ago
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> You can trivially check this yourself. I could not find any quote like this..not sure why you think it's so trivial to find. > No. If the app were sideloaded, Facebook would just implement a fingerprinting solution or provide their own identifier, and ignore Apple’s mechanism. You mean like how they ignored Apples location sharing mechanism and maliciously opened your photos to read metadata? Or the one a few years back about playing silent audio tracks to stay open in the background? |
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You won’t find a ‘quote’, but it it’s trivial to educate yourself on this mechanism. E.g. Apple’s documentation. Various articles about ad tracking transparency, etc.
If you haven’t read the technical materials about the subject, why do you claim to understand it?
> You mean like how they ignored Apples location sharing mechanism and maliciously opened your photos to read metadata?
There is no rule against reading the metadata. Yes it’s malicious, but Apple doesn’t currently have grounds for removing the app. The correct solution is to stop leaving the metadata in the file.
> Or the one a few years back about playing silent audio tracks to stay open in the background?
That one was indeed solved by a rule change.
But why do you mention these?
Presumably to support your claim that sideloading would be no different from the App Store when it comes to privacy.
If you understood the mechanisms, you’d know this was false.