bitpush 19 hours ago

> Apple warns Australia

Who the heck does Apple think they are?

Also, why doesnt Apple "warn" China for the well documented privacy/security implications in that country?

  • ksec 12 hours ago

    While this isn't exactly warning Australia as a threat as many comments have suggested. It wasn't long ago Apple actually warn that they might pull iPhone out those countries.

    Their PR system aren't as good as it was and plenty of traces left on the internet.

  • wat10000 18 hours ago

    They are “warning” in the sense of describing what they claim will be negative outcomes from this. It’s not a threat. As for China, what would they say? “Your policy of surveillance and censorship puts users’ privacy and freedom at risk”? They know, that’s the whole point.

    • mmmlinux 15 hours ago

      They could say "We're going to stop subsidizing the entire Chinese tech industry"

      • wat10000 15 hours ago

        I'm confused. Are we in favor or against Apple trying to dictate laws in sovereign countries?

        • skyyler 15 hours ago

          It depends on how much money we can make through exploitation of those laws, I think?

  • OsrsNeedsf2P 18 hours ago

    They aren't warning Australia as a threat, they are making a very valid argument:

    > Apple claims that allowing sideloading and alternative app stores effectively opens the door for malware, fraud, scams, and other harmful content.

    You don't want random apps on your phone. The App Store vets apps thoroughly to ensure there's no malware. It would be virtually impossible to do the same for arbitrary apps getting side loaded.

    • rpdillon 17 hours ago

      A walled app store is neither necessary nor sufficient to prevent malware and scams. This is just Apple trotting out their usual arguments to try and stem the tide of countries that are mandating side-loading.

    • unfitted2545 18 hours ago

      If that's a concern, then download apps from the App Store. Just don't make it practically impossible to do anything else.

      • mcphage 17 hours ago

        The worry (not sure it is merited) is that major app developers like Meta, Google, etc will start their own app stores, leading everyone to need to start downloading apps from outside Apple’s App Store.

        • cwillu 8 hours ago

          Oh no, people will be able to choose who to trust on their devices, and then they might not choose apple! The horror!

        • someNameIG 14 hours ago

          Which hasn't happened on Android, Meta is big enough to have their own app store yet all their apps are on Google Play.

    • LocalH 16 hours ago

      > The App Store vets apps thoroughly to ensure there's no malware.

      nice joke

      at best, that sentence needs to say "less malware"

    • exe34 18 hours ago

      > You don't want random apps on your phone

      No. Just the ones that I want are fine, thank you.

    • kjkjadksj 18 hours ago

      I want random apps on my phone. The computer has all these same risks yet the sky doesn’t fall.

      • bitpush 18 hours ago

        This is the part I wish Apple apologists get. Your precious Macbook Pro allows arbitrary apps to be installed over internet, and that seems to be doing just OK.

        • Imustaskforhelp 18 hours ago

          They think that every part of apple is fine.

          But to be honest, I am in android and I have some deep criticisms of android too. Wish things were more linux like (ie. literally running pure linux in mobile phones), there is pinephone os but I kinda wish that it becomes mainstream enough

        • ccakes 16 hours ago

          Not really. A random app I download from Github Releases can easily ship my ~/.ssh/id_rsa off to some server and I'd never be wiser. That's very hard to do on a phone.

          They're not the same thing and treating them as if they are is somewhat naive.

          • protimewaster 15 hours ago

            I think the point is that even that threat hasn't rendered MacBooks to be widely deemed insecure or untrustworthy. So, if the threat of similar insecurities were to show up on phones (which is debatable since AFAIK both iOS and Android have substantially different security models compared to traditional desktop OS apps), why would phones suffer a different fate than laptops or desktops?

      • tonyedgecombe 16 hours ago

        Android offers that (for the moment).

    • victorbjorklund 12 hours ago

      It works for the mac. Apple isnt varning us that macs are unsafe and dangerous.

    • regularjack 14 hours ago

      I do want random apps on my phone. Even if I didn't, it's my phone, I call the shots.

Pesthuf 18 hours ago

The entire EU is in flames ever since they allowed "sideloading". Every device is compromised, people are eating their children to survive.

This is what Apple and macrumors users actually believe.

pjmlp 18 hours ago

Company CEOs have to learn that companies obey the laws of the countries they operate on, not the other way around.

  • ksec 12 hours ago

    There was roughly 10 years of Apple thinking they are the law. Very unfortunate Apple didn't learn from its mistakes.

    • out_of_protocol 3 hours ago

      It also doesn't help that Apple has more free money than great many of the world countries

      • pjmlp an hour ago

        And as many know, in theory all companies have core values trainings, in practice corruption never goes away.

        Still, countries have the last word in what happens inside their borders, and when things don't work as they should, someone is getting wealthier.

        However companies should not misunderstand such short term wins, with having a say on the country's ruling.

rcarmo 2 hours ago

Until I can run the code I wrote onto the hardware I bought without restrictions or timeouts, it’s not sideloading. _That_ is what regulators should have forced Apple to do.

mystraline 19 hours ago

Better yet, repeal DMCA 1201 and ALL associated other country equivalent 'anti-circumvention' laws.

AND ALSO force monopolies, like Apple, to open like the EU did.

solarkraft 8 hours ago

I’m concerned because I was close to suggesting that anything Apple is against must be good. But I like their stance on privacy. Them going so hard on making a point about being anti-consumer may harm future privacy efforts.

anotherhue 19 hours ago

Clearly they have never met an Australian.

lazyeye 15 hours ago

Apple would prefer that users are limited to only their scams.

blitzar 19 hours ago

Or else what?

meepmorp 19 hours ago

I think the word "warn" is a bit of editorializing (by the Guardian, originally). They're just making the same argument in Australia that they did before the EU.

  • bamboozled 19 hours ago

    The guardian loves hyperbole , I pay for it but they love publishing rot more often than I’d like to admit.

amiga386 18 hours ago

[flagged]

  • bitpush 18 hours ago

    If you dont like government policies, you vote them out not ask a trillion dollar company with little to no oversight to come and bulldoze them.