Apple Releases its First Transparency Report

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dalethepcman

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If anyone thinks cellular data, texts, location, phone calls or anything they have ever done online wasn't tracked filed and stuck in a database, then your living in the past.

Really the problem in this tech is with the companies that sell it. The Government themselves don't have this data, they rely on laws put in place to allow them access to this data. If the corporations intentionally built a product or service that could not use logging of certain types of data then this wouldn't even be an issue as the data the government seeks wouldn't be available.

Instead of creating a device that is secure, the companies would rather line their pockets by intentionally building these devices and services with information gathering and logging in mind so they can sell wiretapping services to uncle sam about you on your dime.

There are many articles about these companies taking billions of tax dollars selling data about their users to the government.

I don't blame the government for wanting the data, it is valuable. I blame the corporations for gathering and storing it in the first place.
 

Grandmastersexsay

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You don't blame the government for wanting to spy on its citizens?

You and the rest of the idiots condoning this behavior are more to blame than any corporation.

As far as the governments not having the data, you must enjoy hitting yourself in the head with a hammer because I can't think of another reason for such stupidity. Why don't you read up on the NSA's Utah data center.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Utah_Data_Center

We're talking exabytes of data on you, me, your congressman's favorite porn sub-genres, ect.

One exabyte is enough to store 3.2 GB of data for every U.S. citizen, and the storage capacity of just this data center is estimated to be between 3 and 12 exabytes! 7 exabytes is enough to store 1.0 GB of data for every single person on this planet!
 

Grandmastersexsay

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I didn't say I have any expectation of privacy numbnuts. I'm saying we should have privacy.
 

kinggremlin

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No duh. This database you refer to is called your phone bill. You should be able to look up every call and text you have made/received for months going back online from your account. How do you think your cellular provider knows what to bill you without storing basically all of this data?
 

Geef

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There is only one place I would have an expectation of total privacy and thats while dropping a load in the bathroom. Even if someone is monitoring the sounds I don't think they want to hear a huge fart followed by on and off grunting over time. :p
 

rwinches

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It's has nothing to do with privacy or expectations of any kind.

It is about having a fourth branch of government that is unbridled, unrestricted and is subject to no real oversight. That means we have no idea to whom they answer or follow with any surety.

With the data they have it can be used in many ways it can be mined for any number of attributes. So what if whomever is in control has an agenda that uses some specific criteria to determine undesirables or 'enemies' or people that need to be watched or further investigated. Think of the control or pressure or the fact that they might also capable of injecting data.

Already they can 'gag' you if you are under investigation. Already your local police are being federalized by Homeland Security, DEA, ICE, ATF.

Your rights are being taken away and you stand by and watch as if you are watching one the dozens of Police TV shows that have desensitized you to the point that you find it all just so entertaining.
 

dalethepcman

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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Room_641A

AT&T didn't have to go along with this, neither did the other ISP's. They have attorneys.

http://www.theguardian.com/world/interactive/2013/jun/06/verizon-telephone-data-court-order

Verizon could have just as easily implemented internal policies to prevent this type of court ruling from being able to gather data about its users.

You complain about your rights being taken away, but you are the one standing by the sidelines doing nothing about it. I work for a rather large company and we have intentionally setup logging of user data to only be stored long enough to create billing data, to not be included in system backups, and to be non survivable if the systems were to lose power.

This is a business risk that we take, yes we may lose a day of billing to our customers, but we cater to them and their privacy, not the government.

The government by itself wouldn't have the capability to monitor its own citizens without the acceptance of these mega corporations. I don't blame them for wanting the data, I blame the companies that have the data for not destroying it when it was legally safe for them to do so.

After the court orders have already been placed, it is too late them to change data retention policies, but they knew this from the beginning and chose to not protect users data.

Without operations like the two above, and im sure countless others by now the utah data center you refer to wouldn't have anything to store. It would be a giant empty database.



If this is truly what you believe, then you know who they follow and answer to. Some will call it a conspiracy, some will call it truth, I call it the curse that is life on this earth. If you are religious at all, then reading the first verses of the good book will explain why this world is cursed as well as how to become saved from that curse.
 
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