Academics reckon Apple's default apps have privacy pitfalls
Briefly

Our work shows that users may disable default apps, only to discover later that the settings do not match their initial preference.
Our results demonstrate users are not correctly able to configure the desired privacy settings of default apps. In addition, we discovered that some default app configurations can even reduce trust in family relationships.
The researchers criticize data collection by Apple apps like Safari and Siri, where that data is sent, how users can (and can't) disable that data tracking, and how Apple presents privacy options to users.
Read at Theregister
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