In a generation wary of privacy policies, Apple Inc. AAPL has trust issues. Consumers of the iPhone 11 have complained for months about a “privacy location bug” that did not receive a formal explanation until Friday.
The iPhone 11 requests users’ locations in spite of internal settings configured not to seek such information. Even with “Location Services” off and similar tracking off on individual applications, users have found that the Location Services icon continues to pop up on the phone’s status bar.
“The icon appears for system services that do not have a switch in Settings,” Apple explained to KrebsOnSecurity.
More specifically, the feature relates to the device’s short-range, Ultra Wideband technology that gives the phone “spatial awareness” to nearby iPhones. It’s the radio technology used for AirDropping files.
What To Know About Ultra Wideband Tech
“Ultra Wideband technology is an industry standard technology and is subject to international regulatory requirements that require it to be turned off in certain locations,” Apple said in a statement. “iOS uses Location Services to help determine if iPhone is in these prohibited locations in order to disable Ultra Wideband and comply with regulations. The management of Ultrawide Band compliance and its use of location data is done entirely on the device and Apple is not collecting user location data.”
Security experts have confirmed no evidence of user location data being transmitted to remote servers.
FWIW, tried to dig into this and replicate.
— Will Strafach (@chronic) December 5, 2019
it is very likely that it is something locally which does not have an exposed switch, no evidence of data sent to remote servers.
begs the question: why does Apple not answer for this directly? https://t.co/5Ht2hA30CR
"[T]he answer is so mundane it doesn't make sense that Apple didn't provide it immediately, other than it possibly contradicts the company's advertised promise of the iPhone delivering simple privacy," according to ZDNet's Liam Tung. "At the same time, the explanation shows that iOS is transparent about when the device shares location data – even when Apple can't explain it.
Apple is working on an iOS update to disable the feature.
Apple's stock traded around $267 per share at time of publication.
Related Links:
What To Make Of Apple Earnings: Wearables, China And Apple TV+
© 2024 Benzinga.com. Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved.
Comments
Trade confidently with insights and alerts from analyst ratings, free reports and breaking news that affects the stocks you care about.