Even without the privacy concerns, I think it removes the sovereignty of your own computer.
I decide what code I run on my computer.
A few years ago I had some peripheral that started iTunes Music.app every time I plugged it in. (Bluetooth headphones, I think). As I don’t use it, and there was no way to disable it I figured i could just delete it.
Nope! Music.app is a system application on a read-only partition shadowed on your root filesystem. Apparently it is possible by booting with the partition in read-write developer mode, but you’ll get to do it all over again with every update.
Agreed, though I think privacy strictness that disallows certificate checking might just skip MacOS entirely.
Privacy defaults on Apple systems are generally good — at least most potential risks are opt-in rather than opt-out, which the majority of vendors prefer — but without lockdown engaged MacOS has a lot of I/O that might not pass the strictest audits.
Most likely this is a non-issue for the majority of users but for anyone really strict on privacy it’s a different story.
Even without the privacy concerns, I think it removes the sovereignty of your own computer.
I decide what code I run on my computer.
A few years ago I had some peripheral that started
iTunesMusic.app every time I plugged it in. (Bluetooth headphones, I think). As I don’t use it, and there was no way to disable it I figured i could just delete it.Nope! Music.app is a system application on a read-only partition shadowed on your root filesystem. Apparently it is possible by booting with the partition in read-write developer mode, but you’ll get to do it all over again with every update.
As a parent and someone doing tech support for oldsters the more walled their gardens the less work for me.
And for me that’s all that matters right now.
Try this: https://github.com/tombonez/noTunes
Thanks, but it’s no longer an issue. I had a work-issued Mac, but now I’m all Linux.
Agreed, though I think privacy strictness that disallows certificate checking might just skip MacOS entirely.
Privacy defaults on Apple systems are generally good — at least most potential risks are opt-in rather than opt-out, which the majority of vendors prefer — but without lockdown engaged MacOS has a lot of I/O that might not pass the strictest audits.