Speaking at the International Conference of Data Protection and Watch Take Turns Tasting With College Alumni OnlinePrivacy Commissioners, Apple CEO Tim Cook warned of tech’s “data industrial complex.”
“Our own information, from the everyday to the deeply personal, is being weaponized against us with military efficiency,” said Cook. “These scraps of data, each one harmless enough on its own, are carefully assembled, synthesized, traded and sold. Taken to its extreme this process creates an enduring digital profile and lets companies know you better than you may know yourself.”
Cook provided an example of how this data is being used, one we especially see being weaponized in political news media. “If green is your favorite color, you may find yourself reading a lot of articles — or watching a lot of videos — about the insidious threat from people who like orange.”
Cook didn’t mince words. “We shouldn’t sugarcoat the consequences. This is surveillance.”
Without naming names, Cook knocked companies that puts “profits over privacy.” “These stockpiles of personal data serve only to enrich the companies that collect them.”
Whether you’re an Apple fan or not, one area where the company should be lauded is its commitment -- at the very least, comparatively to other tech companies like Facebook and Google -- to put users’ privacy first. Apple’s privacy policyoutlines just how little access anyone but you has over the data on your Apple products.
In an age rife with hackers, bad actors, and even the very companies trusted with hoarding all this data misusing our private information, the Apple CEO came out and threw his support behind a “comprehensive federal privacy law in the United States.”
Cook outlined the “four essential rights” he’d like to see in such a law: the right to have personal data minimized, the right to public knowledge over what user data is being collected for and why, the right for users to access their data, and the right to security.
In calling for this federal law, Apple’s CEO really sounded the alarm over just how bad the issues surrounding data and privacy have become. “At the same time, we see vividly — painfully — how technology can harm rather than help,” said Cook. “This crisis is real. It is not imagined, or exaggerated, or crazy. And those of us who believe in technology's potential for good must not shrink from this moment,” he added.
“We must never stop asking ourselves, what kind of world do we want to live in?”
Topics Apple Cybersecurity Privacy
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
How 'Barbie' became the American monoculture of the moment
London’s Wellcome Library Opens Its Digital Archive for Free
Our New Year’s Resolution: Stop Watching So Much Fucking TV by Dan Piepenbring
Dell S3422DWG Gaming Monitor deal: save $100 at Amazon
'The Witcher' Season 3's weapons are full of hidden clues
Horace Walpole’s The Castle of Otranto Is One Weird Gothic
X threatens brands with lost verification if they don't cough up $1,000 a month
Shop the Shark FlexStyle for 20% off at Amazon
I got hooked on lemon water. Here's why you should too.
Amazon Spring Sale 2025: Best Apple AirPods 4 deal
In 2014, Subscribe to the Paris Review and McSweeney's
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。