Tim Cook pretends to care about privacy in Time op-ed
Tim Cook, in an op-ed in Time Magazine: In 2019, it's time to stand up for the right to privacy-yours, mine, all of ours. Consumers shouldn't have to tolerate another year of companies irresponsibly amassing huge user profiles, data breaches that seem out of control and the vanishing ability to control our own digital lives. This problem is solvable-it isn't too big, too challenging or too late. Innovation, breakthrough ideas and great features can go hand in hand with user privacy-and they must. Realizing technology's potential depends on it. That's why I and others are calling on the U.S. Congress to pass comprehensive federal privacy legislation-a landmark package of reforms that protect and empower the consumer. Last year, before a global body of privacy regulators, I laid out four principles that I believe should guide legislation. If Tim Cook and Apple really cared about privacy, they wouldn't have thrown 1.2 billion Chinese under the bus by handing over iCloud data to the Chinese government, and by sheepishly refusing to even mention "China" when it comes to Apple's thin veneer of "privacy first". Apple's complete cooperation with the Chinese government makes it very clear that Apple is all too eager to roll over and disregard its privacy chest-thumping the second their own bottom line is at risk. And lest we forget - China is a totalitarian, repressive regime that doesn't shy away from torture and concentration camps. How many Chinese Apple users have ended up in prison - or worse - because Tim Cook only cares about your privacy if you're western?