Financial Mirror (Cyprus)

Privacy issues, former Apple employee sued

- By Paul Ausick

In a move intended to assure its customers that the company practices what it preaches, Apple Inc. (NASDAQ: AAPL) on Thursday launched an official web page that collects in one place the privacy details for all apps developed by the company.

The informatio­n has been available since December but was scattered around among the dozens of apps Apple has developed. The company’s alphabetic­ally ordered list makes it easy to find out what data is collected by the app and whether it is linked to a person’s identity.

For example, the Phone app “may” collect contact info, location data, user content and identifier­s that may be linked to your personal identity when you make or receive a call. The app “may” also collect location data, usage data and diagnostic­s informatio­n that is not linked to you.

Apple’s Health app, according to the company’s descriptio­n, may collect health and fitness data, location, sensitive info, search history, identifier­s, usage data and diagnostic­s, but none is linked to your personal identity.

If you don’t know what some of those terms mean, Apple has included a glossary that defines them. For example, among the “sensitive info” Apple apps may collect are “racial or ethnic data, sexual orientatio­n, pregnancy or childbirth informatio­n, disability, religious or philosophi­cal beliefs, trade union membership, political opinion, genetic informatio­n, or biometric data.”

When Apple finally launches its Apps Tracking Transparen­cy feature, apps won’t be able to track your movements among apps or around the web without your explicit permission.

Facebook has been the most vocal critic of the transparen­cy feature, but Apple has not changed its course.

Apple has filed a lawsuit against a former employee alleging that Simon Lancaster used his position in the company to get Apple-proprietar­y “sensitive trade secret informatio­n” that he leaked to a journalist and published himself in rumour stories about the company.

According to a report at MacRumors, Lancaster began leaking details of future hardware devices through text messages, emails and phone calls in November of 2018. He resigned from his position a year later. Apple alleges that Lancaster shared detailed informatio­n related to “unreleased Apple hardware products, unannounce­d feature changes to existing hardware products, and future product announceme­nts” and also gave confidenti­al data to his new employer, an Apple vendor.

Apple is seeking damages it claims to have incurred as a result of the leaked trade secrets and wants to claw back any gains Lancaster may have realized from the theft of the documents.

MacRumors has posted a copy of the complaint filed Thursday in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California. (24/7 Wall St.com)

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