> You have to trust Apple and if you don't then buy another computer.
No, I don't have to trust Apple or anyone absolutely, and I can and do use a Mac, as the least bad option for my purposes, without fully trusting Apple. You're presenting a false dichotomy. Trust is a matter of degree, not all or nothing. In general I trust my mother (except her advice, which I often ignore), but if she insisted that she had to install cameras in my home for my "safety", I would start to have serious doubts about her.
> Because they have the ability at any point to push software to your computer that compromises your privacy and security in almost undetectable ways. And short of them having an entirely open-source OS that will always be the case.
1) They can't push software to my computer, because I've blocked the software update mechanism with Little Snitch and only install when I'm ready.
2) Open source is not a panacea, as demonstrated by the XZ Utils backdoor.
Moreover, closed source does not render users helpless. Closed source software can be reverse engineered; indeed, I've done that myself with macOS many times. The behavior of closed source software can also be observed in various ways with various tools, for example, the aforementioned Little Snitch. And even when macOS bypassed Little Snitch one time a few years ago, that was detected by developers. The whole world is watching Apple closely, so the company can't simply get away with whatever they want undetected.
> The whole point of their privacy stance is to protect you from companies like Google and rogue governments who we already know can't be fully trusted
We already know that Apple can't be fully trusted.
We also know that Apple actually caters to "rogue" governments such as China, by removing apps from the App Store at the Chinese government's request, as well as handing over control of iCloud servers to China, and reportedly Apple source code too, for inspection.
> 1) They can't push software to my computer, because I've blocked the software update mechanism with Little Snitch
They can because they (Apple) run in kernel space and Little Snitch no longer does/can. So LS, god love it, only works because Apple lets it. If Apple wanted to they could push updates to your OS without LS knowing about it.
> They can because they (Apple) run in kernel space and Little Snitch no longer does/can. So LS, god love it, only works because Apple lets it.
I already addressed this later in my comment: "And even when macOS bypassed Little Snitch one time a few years ago, that was detected by developers. The whole world is watching Apple closely, so the company can't simply get away with whatever they want undetected."
> If Apple wanted to they could push updates to your OS without LS knowing about it.
They could release an update that allows later updates to bypass Little Snitch, but they can't magically make that ability retroactive and get it on a Mac that doesn't currently have that update installed.
>They could release an update that allows later updates to bypass Little Snitch
Or the ability could be there already without us knowing.
But fortunately we can still run our own routers/switches and see outgoing traffic. If you configure LS to block everything then you could confirm it with your network gear.
> Or the ability could be there already without us knowing.
An empirically baseless conspiracy theory.
> But fortunately we can still run our own routers/switches and see outgoing traffic. If you configure LS to block everything then you could confirm it with your network gear.
That was my point. Apple isn't actually capable of completely avoiding detection.
Anyway, just as I don't trust Apple absolutely, I don't distrust Apple absolutely either. They do some user-hostile things, which are richly deserving of criticism, but I prefer to engage with facts and evidence rather than idle speculation and paranoia.
You misunderstand I think. I don't think it's likely. It would be easy to catch them. I also don't distrust Apple completely. I was (pedantically) replying to your comment that "They can't push software to my computer, because I've blocked the software update mechanism with Little Snitch". "Can't" is too strong. They could is what I'm saying, as in, they have the ability/possibility to do so. They can't time travel, because that's impossible. But they can establish network connections, because they control the firmware and kernel, which exceeds your control via Little Snitch.
and critically, the suspicion is that they handed off the keys for iMessage encryption used inside China. And if they did it for love of money for China, would they really not do it for the right US government inquiry?
Google's better in that they chose not to do business in China the same way. For now.
I'm not sure why you're replying to me with a sarcastic response when I was merely disputing the notion that "The whole point of their privacy stance is to protect you from companies like Google and rogue governments".
On the other hand, the issue is not as simple as Apple following the law, because Apple chose to lock down iPhone and set themselves up as the sole gatekeeper for app installations. On the Mac, which allows distribution from outside the App Store, it's not possible to completely ban apps in this way.
It depends, they cried much harder for the DMA in the EU and still aren't really fully compliant. In China, they were quite okay to throw citizens under the bus without much complaints though.
Because they assume the EU would be weaker and more malleable to US influence than China and the CCP.
US companies keep trying to impose local US rules, policies and way of thinking of their HQ whenever they operate abroad, especially in Europe, but totally do an 180 when they operate in China.
> Because they assume the EU would be weaker and more malleable to US influence than China and the CCP.
That doesn't really fit, because the course of action would be the same in both cases. If the CCP says they have to ban apps then enable side loading or third party stores so customers in China can install the banned apps from another source but the company can still feign compliance. This is the same thing the EU says they have to do anyway, except that it actually defeats the onerous regulation in China whereas in the EU the regulation is intended to benefit rather than oppress the user and Apple objects to it because they're the one wearing the boot.
The explanation that fits is that they care about their own control (and so fight the EU) but don't care as much about China oppressing their customers (and so bend the knee there).
> US companies keep trying to impose local US rules, policies and way of thinking of their HQ whenever they operate abroad, especially in Europe, but totally do an 180 when they operate in China.
In general company leaders should try to have morals and use their influence to push back against rules from governments trying to harm their people. Obviously publicly-traded companies have a perverse tendency to do the opposite of this once they're controlled by Wall St rather than the original founders.
> Because they have the ability at any point to push software to your computer that compromises your privacy and security in almost undetectable ways. And short of them having an entirely open-source OS that will always be the case.
We know this isn't true because the contrary to this is how we know this is happening. Even when the OS is closed source, someone can still inspect its network traffic or get it running in a virtual machine and see what it's doing, and then publish the result if they find something untoward.
But once your data has been exfiltrated onto their servers, you no longer have any way of auditing what they do with it after that. So the only way to have any assurance of your own privacy is to call any behavior that exfiltrates your data a violation of trust.
It might be easier to audit open source code than closed, and maybe then we should be demanding open source operating systems, but there is still a large difference between "this is difficult but possible and so someone in the world could do it and let everyone else know" and "there is no mechanism for members of the public to validate their claims at all".
Trusting Apple not to break the computer I paid them $1k+ for is very different from trusting Apple to not hoover up and sell my personal data (or let it get stolen).
> Because they have the ability at any point to push software to your computer that compromises your privacy and security in almost undetectable ways. And short of them having an entirely open-source OS that will always be the case.
I don't believe such things would be undetectable. If that were the case, how would we have discovered the OCSP server?
Another point I don't understand is that, if it were made open-source, wouldn't Apple have the same level of control? After all, they'd still be the ones building the binaries. As another commentor noted, the XZ backdoor proved that even open-source software shouldn't be blindly trusted.
As opposed to the orderly and just governments, that are so clearly-defined and well trusted?
Or are you more highlighting the unlawful conduct from businesses like NGO Group that are so shamefully allowed to persist without government scrutiny? It's hard for me to tell, since both of them have hacked iPhones to attain privileged access and will likely do it again. From where I'm standing it looks like their "promise" has more holes in it than swiss cheese.