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8 points

Well, then there’s also the people that don’t realize that there are all sorts of programs out there that will try to take that “anonymized” data and then tie it right back to a persons profile.

For example, you can anonymize GPS location data, but just because you strip away identifying information doesn’t mean that you’re truly anonymous. It can still be obvious where you live and where you work. And once you figure out where they live (again based on anonymous data) you can tie that information right back into their profile and continue to track them as if nothing has changed. https://www.popularmechanics.com/technology/security/a15927450/identify-individual-users-with-stravas-heatmap/

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1 point

Not all anonymization techniques are created equal? I’m pretty sure this is fairly obvious at this point to anybody remotely familiar with how data collection works when it comes to privacy and device metrics.

So, how is this relevant to this conversation besides adding more FUD and misinformation?

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-1 points

You sound like you know a lot more than everyone else on this subject so I thank you for your responses as a means to educate others.

Just a word of advice, be sure to treat others with respect rather than assuming the worst of their intentions or calling them idiots because they don’t know as much as you.

My response is still relevant to the conversation as we are talking about “anonymized data”. The link in my comment above proves that just because you are told your data has been “anonymized” does not truly mean that it’s impossible to re-attribute it back to an individual.

So if you trust that Apple has great techniques for data anonymization, that’s awesome, feel free to expand on that and explain why. Just don’t go around telling others that simply having any sort of anonymization technique makes it so you don’t have to worry.

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3 points
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Thanks for the “advice”. Now, let me expand on my position.

The reason why I’m slightly annoyed but everyone’s take here is:

  1. The demeanor that folks here have in passing on ill informed opinion as fact and then speculating details.
  2. Not looking at the actual privacy policy of a company and the history of how said company has been involved in data collection, privacy, implementation of features in that realm and their handling of customer data.
  3. Bringing up random points just to win an argument instead of conceding that they do not what they are talking about.

Here’s a few links to put things in perspective as to what and how Apple anonymizes data and how seriously it takes privacy:

https://www.apple.com/privacy/docs/Differential_Privacy_Overview.pdf

https://www.apple.com/privacy/labels/

https://www.apple.com/privacy/control/

Read through those, look at Apple’s implementation of TouchID, FaceID and their stance on E2E encryption and tell me again why Apple isn’t serious about privacy, masking and anonymizing data, implementing differential privacy and informing users of what they collect and how users can opt-out of it.

Edit- Further evidence and reading:

https://www.techradar.com/news/fbi-says-apples-new-encryption-launch-is-deeply-concerning

https://www.digitaltrends.com/mobile/apple-data-collection/

https://www.apple.com/privacy/docs/A_Day_in_the_Life_of_Your_Data.pdf

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8 points

That won’t work on Apples data - they group all the data into cohorts, so the anonymising isn’t reversible.

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3 points

Can you explain a bit more about Apple grouping their data into cohorts? I haven’t heard much about this before. For example, how would grouping data into cohorts work with GPS data?

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