Thursday, May 9, 2019

Android Q gets the privacy controls Google should have added years ago

Android Q gets the privacy controls Google should have added years ago
Just a few of the bizarre sites that were running in the background charging thousands of dollars since I became public enemy number one. 

All activists and journalists are the horrible people who are hurting Trump's fee fees. 

When Trump cried about Obama "tapped his wires"  and whines about FISA and I was embarrassed for him. 

How can he control nuclear missiles and be totally ignorant of NASA and Surveillance and the telecom act and the digital transition mandated by the FCC which had more to do with creating an extensive seamless network to track and monitor we the people and listen to our  most private movements and activities on in our own homes and every public space from CVS to Target or city park 

To. Be continued. I have to take an Uber to  take me to get another burner. Apparently LulzSec JS. And and I'm too exhausted to deal with the help-LESS desk. 







Android Q gets the privacy controls Google should have added years ago

Android Q gets the privacy controls Google should have added years ago

As tech giants come under fire for facilitating the widespread collection and sale of personal data, Google has read the room and will add new privacy features to Android. In the next version of the operating system, called Android Q, apps will need explicit permission to track users' locations while running in the background. Android Q will also limit access to hardware information (presumably to stop device fingerprinting), and will no longer track "affinity" for contacts, which means apps won't be able to see who users interact with the most.

Apple has already adopted many of these features in iOS and MacOS as the company turns privacy into a key selling point. Most notably, iOS users have been able to limit background location access since 2017, while Android's location access has been all-or-nothing. As the New York Times reported in December, popular apps like The Weather Channel and TheScore have in turn been selling that location data to marketers. With U.S. lawmakers starting to think about new privacy laws, it behooves Google to get in front of the issue.

Having said all that, Android phone makers have a poor track record of updating their software in a timely manner, if at all. Unless you're using one of Google's Pixel phones, which can now beta-test an early version of Android Q, you might not see these privacy improvements for quite some time.



Elyssa D. Durant 
Research & Policy Analyst

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