What Safari reveals about Apple’s AI strategy ahead of WWDC
Privacy on Safari
Apple has been building privacy protections into Safari for years. The browser protects you from malicious scripts that might attempt to access passwords or credit card information.
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Privacy on Safari
Apple has been building privacy protections into Safari for years. The browser protects you from malicious scripts that might attempt to access passwords or credit card information. Safari also tells you what data an extension wants to access and can restrict access to match your settings. It blocks third-party cookies by default, detects and removes trackers, and has measures in place to prevent data companies from identifying — and following — you through device characteristics.
That’s even before Apple’s powerful Private Browsing mode, which includes meaningful protections. The company has put together a page packed with resources to explain the privacy protections it has in place across its platforms.
Privacy is critical to Apple — not only because the company regards it as a human right, but because it correctly recognizes that to make new generations of sensor-laden technologies it must ensure privacy is protected. Without privacy and trust, people won’t use the technology.
Trust is the product, not you
The truth is that people are becoming increasingly concerned about how the digital devices we depend on for convenience are now being used for different kinds of surveillance, and we need to be convinced that our personal data is protected. We do not want every aspect of our life to become fodder to feed a digital dystopia, even as we still want the positive solutions technology promises.
