It is upsetting to know that we are in control of eternity. Companies that don't even know what they are or are doing are often paying attention to us and are becoming the meat of cyber listing. They look at us through land, sea and air. That you look at what we visit on the Internet, or where we are, with the geolocation of our mobile.
Apple is very committed to protecting the privacy of its users, and the latest figures show. Due to the privacy controls installed in iOS 13, they watch us a little too much.
Since the launch of iOs 13 last fall, third-party access to our location data via iPhone and iPad has dropped 68 percent. This is published by Fast Company, according to statistics provided by Location Science, a company that analyzes mobile data for mobile users.
It also specifies that the exchange of prior data, which occurs only when the application is open, also decreased by 24 percent.
IOS 13 occasionally remembers which applications use geolocation, and the user can control whether this app gets your location "only when used", "always allow" or "only once". Looks like this new function is working fine.
Apple has repeatedly stated that it does not intend to assist business models based on the user's location control over their devices. The company accepts this categorically by saying that Apple built its own software and software takes into account the privacy of its users.