Comment by oceanplexian

4 years ago

I agree with the premise of what the parent is saying. How is it legal that you can enter into a contract that gives Apple a perpetual right to your private (Or your company’s) data, without clearly requiring you to consent, with a witness or notary, in plain and understandable terms at the point of purchase?

If your data is located in a cloud you might make the argument that Apple is the owner of the system. But if Apple is truly accessing data from your personal device or “server” without explicit authorization, it violates a whole host of computer crime laws.

> But if Apple is truly accessing data from your personal device or “server” without explicit authorization

If you're uploading the photos to iCloud Photos, you clearly have given authorisation to Apple - in the sense of accepting the iCloud T&Cs and saying yes to "store my photos in iCloud Photos" for them to access the data in those photos, else they wouldn't be able to upload them.