I do not subscribe to the view that storing data in clouds is always a good thing. Apple has promoted clouds, and offers "tempting" sentences such as "view your photos on all your devices" etc. Sometimes this is a good thing, but if it were replaced by "view all your secret documents on all your devices" it perhaps would not be. That would allow a thief or other malefactor to not only steal a physical device but also the data which the original user may not have realised would be available on that device without having ever entered it there, or given explicit permission for it to be accessible.
I have noticed a few issues with Apple's cloud over the last year, and I am not convinced that Apple is giving users sufficient control over their own data.
One incident involved some music and a film clip. The data could only have come from me - there are no other copies.
The original files were loaded onto a couple of computers for editing purposes. One day I connected my Apple TV to the TV (I don't leave it on all the time - in fact I hardly use it at all), and then realised that I could see the film clips and access the music. That might have happened if I'd given permission to a cloud for that to happen, but as far as I know I never did. I never do if I can avoid it.
Recently I noticed another such leak. In the last month or two I have been using smart email folders in email in order to organise my mail. I find them useful. The latest "issue" is that when I started up a computer which I have not used since before Christmas, I noticed some smart folders in the mail client, which seemed to match smart email folders I'd created recently on other machines. How did they get there?
Perhaps that isn't an Apple issue but rather a mail server issue - but it does suggest something going on behind the scenes which I can't control.
Regarding the (Apple) computer which I don't use much, I updated the OS since there was a recent update. It was previously upgraded to run El Capitan, but I did decide to bring it up to the latest version of that OS. It continually nags me to turn on my cloud.
Are we now in an era where it is going to be impossible to run a computer if it is not connected to at least one third party cloud service? It's beginning to look that way. I've not seriously used Windows based computers for years, and my suspicion is that Windows systems are no better than Apple's regarding extracting data and placing it on third party cloud sites. Of course we all know how much we should trust such respectable companies as Apple, Microsoft etc., so there are no worries, are there?
I have noticed a few issues with Apple's cloud over the last year, and I am not convinced that Apple is giving users sufficient control over their own data.
One incident involved some music and a film clip. The data could only have come from me - there are no other copies.
The original files were loaded onto a couple of computers for editing purposes. One day I connected my Apple TV to the TV (I don't leave it on all the time - in fact I hardly use it at all), and then realised that I could see the film clips and access the music. That might have happened if I'd given permission to a cloud for that to happen, but as far as I know I never did. I never do if I can avoid it.
Recently I noticed another such leak. In the last month or two I have been using smart email folders in email in order to organise my mail. I find them useful. The latest "issue" is that when I started up a computer which I have not used since before Christmas, I noticed some smart folders in the mail client, which seemed to match smart email folders I'd created recently on other machines. How did they get there?
Perhaps that isn't an Apple issue but rather a mail server issue - but it does suggest something going on behind the scenes which I can't control.
Regarding the (Apple) computer which I don't use much, I updated the OS since there was a recent update. It was previously upgraded to run El Capitan, but I did decide to bring it up to the latest version of that OS. It continually nags me to turn on my cloud.
Are we now in an era where it is going to be impossible to run a computer if it is not connected to at least one third party cloud service? It's beginning to look that way. I've not seriously used Windows based computers for years, and my suspicion is that Windows systems are no better than Apple's regarding extracting data and placing it on third party cloud sites. Of course we all know how much we should trust such respectable companies as Apple, Microsoft etc., so there are no worries, are there?
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