Sujet : Re: Employee lawsuit accuses Apple of spying on its workers
De : hugybear (at) *nospam* gmx.net (Jörg Lorenz)
Groupes : misc.phone.mobile.iphoneDate : 03. Dec 2024, 22:20:03
Autres entêtes
Organisation : Camembert Normand aus Lait Cru
Message-ID : <vinsm3$cha9$1@solani.org>
References : 1 2 3 4 5 6
User-Agent : Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; Intel Mac OS X 10.15; rv:128.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/128.5.1
On 03.12.24 21:47, Chris wrote:
badgolferman <REMOVETHISbadgolferman@gmail.com> wrote:
Chris wrote:
>
What's your opinion? Given you thought it was worthwhile to share.
>
I carry two iPhones precisely for this reason. One is a company phone
and the other a personal phone. Once we were informed company phones
would be monitored and certain apps would be restricted from being
installed, I knew it was time to get my own phone.
If it's genuinely a company phone - i.e. bought and provided by them - then
they're entitled to restrict use as they see fit.
+1; no doubt about that
My company phone
has nothing on it except for iOS and Microsoft Office suite. I also
have two Apple IDs, a personal and a work one.
>
If the Apple employees don't want their personal lives monitored they
can carry two phones too. The part of the article which concerns me is
this and I don't quite understand the reasoning behind it:
"To evade Apple’s surveillance, employees could use a work-owned device
and use a separate iCloud account only for work, but the suit says the
company “actively discourages” work-only iCloud accounts."
I mean it's a suit. Anyone can allege what they want in a suit even things
that don't make sense. I wouldn't put any weight on it.
Couldn't agree more. A judge and a jury will decide.
This article is completely one sided and not a serious base for a
discussion in this group.
-- "Roma locuta, causa finita." (Augustinus)