by eric » Wed Jun 03, 2015 7:22 am
Putting school essays from Pages to iCloud is just not a big deal at all. And you can also turn all of that off. They didn't (unless there was a system error) relocate documents to iCloud and delete them from your personal computer. I actually do use those services. Either way it's, again, nbd. Not like they're scanning through my essays on Carl Sagan to put a gmail banner up asking me if I want to buy books about Carl Sagan.
Google doesn't care that much about privacy. They try to protect user data from falling into the wrong hands, and that's fine and expected, but it's Google having it which is the scary part. I am glad that we live in a world where people can opt to give away their data in exchange for a service, I just think that the trade off is that people are being taken advantage of, mostly unknowingly. Facebook by far being the worst, followed by the rest of the social media companies: Twitter, Snapchat, Pintrest, etc... .
The Ford comparison is nonsense. Apple is actually in the privacy industry, Ford isn't in the diamond industry. The rest of your post about interacting with customer data I don't really know what you're referring to.
"With the first link, the chain is forged. The first speech censured, the first thought forbidden, the first freedom denied, chains us all irrevocably."