The Borneo Post

Lawmakers get Apple to reveal how often its store rejects apps

- By Hayley Tsukayama

APPLE has answered several questions about its data collection practices posed by House Republican­s on the Energy and Commerce committee.

Four senior Republican­s on the committee including chairman Greg Walden pressed the technology giant on whether its operating systems allowed for its companies or outside app developers to use data from smartphone­s “in ways that consumers do not expect.”

House Republican­s sent the July letter after reports that Google’s Android phones were capable of collecting data from a phone’s microphone through its voice assistant, even when consumers hadn’t triggered the assistant. It sent letters to both Apple and Google - which, together, control the two largest operating systems - asking whether that was true. It also asked whether the companies collect location informatio­n the background when Bluetooth or other technologi­es capable of tracking a phone’s location were turned off.

The letters followed broader scrutiny of the way technology giants collect and use data in ways that may infringe on Americans’ privacy.

Apple in its response, which it shared with The Washington Post, said that its Siri voice assistant does not collect data unless it hears the trigger phrase, “Hey Siri.” The company also said it does not share any “Siri utterances” to third parties. Apple in the letter also laid out many of the policies it has shared publicly about its data collection and data use practices, which reflect what consumers see in the privacy policies they’re asked to review when they buy an Apple device.

The firm said that its phones do not collect any location informatio­n from WiFi networks, cellular networks or Bluetooth when those capabiliti­es are switched off.

That reflects what Apple has said in its privacy policies.

The company did reveal for the first time how many apps it rejects from its App Store for failing to comply with its policies - nearly 40 per cent of submission­s don’t make the cut.

“The App Review team reviews more than 100,000 submission­s per week, and reject approximat­ely 36,000 of those submission­s,” Apple’s director of federal government affairs, Timothy Powderly, told the committee.

This is the age of digital transparen­cy, and dodgy policies on privacy won’t do.— Washington Post.

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