They're not trying to be clever, they're trying to point out the very important philisophy of maximizing self reliance that so many people like you eschew.
How do you distinguish between a company who 'has built protecting privacy into their core value proposition' and one who just says they've done so?
What are you going to do if a major privacy scandal comes out with Apple at the center? If you wouldn't jump ship from Apple after a major privacy scandal then why does your input on this matter at all?
Some people feel that is inevitable so it's best to just rip that bandaid off now.
I'm taking aim at the Google bros who try to raise these arguments to muddy the waters into a sort of false equivalence between Apple and Google.
If you're already using a dumb phone and eschewing modern software services, then I'm not really talking to you. Roll on brother/sister, you are living your ideals.
> How do you distinguish between a company who 'has built protecting privacy into their core value proposition' and one who just says they've done so?
The business incentives. Apple's brand and market valuation to some extent depends on being the secure and privacy oriented company you and your family can trust. While Google's valuation and profit depends almost entirely on exploiting as much of your personal data as they possibly can get away with. The business models speaks for themselves.
Does this guarantee privacy and security? Does Apple have a perfect track record here? No of course not, but again if these are my two smartphone choices it seems fairly clear to me.
> but again if these are my two smartphone choices it seems fairly clear to me.
If you really perceive this as a binary choice, I have no idea how you could conclude that iOS is more secure than the Android Open Source Project.
...of course, it's not just a choice between a Google-spyware phone or an Apple-spyware phone. Many people like to reduce it to that so they can rationalize whichever company they pick, but in reality you have many choices including no smartphone at all. On Android's side, the Open Source images have enabled rigorous cross-referencing in OS capability, as well as forks that reduce the already-limited attack surface. Apple has a long track-record of letting zero-days fester in their inbox and failing to communicate promptly to security researchers, even for actively-exploited vulnerabilities.
It's not a "false equivalency" to highlight how Google, Apple and Microsoft all fold over like wet paper when the intelligence agencies come around. It's not a coincidence, either; all of those companies are enrolled in the NSA's domestic warrantless surveillance program.
How do you distinguish between a company who 'has built protecting privacy into their core value proposition' and one who just says they've done so?
What are you going to do if a major privacy scandal comes out with Apple at the center? If you wouldn't jump ship from Apple after a major privacy scandal then why does your input on this matter at all?
Some people feel that is inevitable so it's best to just rip that bandaid off now.