Comment by gruez
3 hours ago
>This is incorrect. The IOS versions of social media apps extract way less data from the device than on android, and is thus more privacy friendly.
Source?
3 hours ago
>This is incorrect. The IOS versions of social media apps extract way less data from the device than on android, and is thus more privacy friendly.
Source?
Here’s one example:
> Meta devised an ingenious system (“localhost tracking”) that bypassed Android’s sandbox protections to identify you while browsing on your mobile phone — even if you used a VPN, the browser’s incognito mode, and refused or deleted cookies in every session.
— https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44235467
That's only one example, and as I explained in a sibling comment[1] doesn't even seem like something iOS designers were specifically defending against. In light of this, I think it's fair to say this example is poor and that another one is warranted. For instance, I'd consider the app tracking transparency changes to be something where iOS was doing better than Android on, but Android has since reached feature parity on that because you can delete your advertising id, which basically does the same thing.
[1] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46755250