30 May 2019

When you sleep your iPhone is programmed to send your private and personal info

(illustration: popular apps contain hidden trackers)

Annually surveillance of the mass population is a multibillion dollar industry, where is it wrapped up under so called advertising or hidden by governments under multi layered shelf corporations.

The push for smartphones and most importantly apps is enormous by governments and corporations alike, as these devices put data syphoning outside of the user's control.

Apps can and do contain 'malicious' code which extracts user data and sends it wherever the programmer has decided to send the data without the user's knowledge and most importantly without consent.

Websites on the other hand can be more easily scrutinised as to where the programmer sends the 'consumer's' (more accurate terms: data generator, corporate slave) data, but the policy is not to program, websites but rather provide apps for them.

Do you really need to read a Rupert Murdoch news site via an app, where the web address will suffice?

The Bank of Melbourne created a smartphone app, which in reality opened up a web browser on the user's smartphone in reality making that app totally useless and an unnecessary cost to the bank's customers.
Realistically apps are detrimental to your online privacy and your personal data.

Please note that even though today there are encryption programs available for communications purposes, mobile phone technology given to the masses was (deliberately) designed not to be private nor secure.

We do not recommend the purchase or use of Apple products.

Did you pay, over 2k, for them to spy on you ??? !!! ??? (PMSL)



See the topic called Surveillance Self-Defence by the Electronic Frontier Foundation at:


See article from 29 May 2019 by The Sydney Morning Herald of the headline:

Do you know who your iPhone talks to when you're sleeping?

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