Google collects more data on Android than Apple on iPhone: Learn
www.rancakmedia.com – Google collects more data from Android users than Apple from iOS users, according to a new research report. Researchers from Trinity College Dublin, Ireland, compared the data Pixel phones share with Google with data iPhones share with Apple, and found that Google collects 20 times more mobile data than Apple.
The investigation also found that the Pixel and iPhone models, on average, exchange data quite frequently, even with “minimal configurations”. According to a report, Google disagrees with the methodology behind the investigation.
Mobile privacy research conducted by Douglas J. Leith and his team at Trinity College Dublin pitted Google's Pixel phones against Apple's iPhones to determine which manufacturer collects more user data. It found that the Pixel and iPhone models exchange data with their respective manufacturers on average every 4.5 minutes. The data collected includes IMEI, hardware serial number, SIM and IMSI serial number, handset phone number, and others, as well as telemetry.
When a user inserts a SIM card into one of these smartphones, Google and Apple details are sent. IOS is known to send the MAC addresses of nearby devices as well as their GPS locations to Apple. iOS users can't turn this off, and there doesn't seem to be a realistic option to prevent it from happening.
If both phones don't sign in and send IMEI, hardware serial number, SIM serial number and phone number to the manufacturer, it will collect Android ID, resettable device identifier, or advertising ID used for measurement and display (RDID/display – ID)) and DroidGuard key used to generate the certificate. In comparison, Apple only collects the UDID and Advertising ID.
apples was found to collect users' locations even when they are not logged in, as well as local, temporary IP addresses Google no. Google also collects Wi-Fi MAC addresses while Apple does not. Both operating systems send telemetry data even if the user rejects it.
Within 10 minutes of launch, Google will collect about 1MB of data, while Apple will collect about 42KB. In sleep mode, Google collects about 1MB of data every 12 hours, while Apple collects about 52KB.
In the Arstechnica report that first uncovered the study, a Google spokesperson said Google disagreed with the study's methodology.
“We found flaws in the researchers' methodology for measuring data volumes, and we disagree with the paper's claim that Android devices share 20 times more data than iPhones. According to our study, these results were an order of magnitude behind, and we shared our methodological concerns with researchers before publication. “It goes on to say:“This study largely explains how smartphones work.
Modern cars regularly send basic data to automakers about vehicle components, their safety status, and maintenance schedules, and cell phones work in a very similar way. This report describes the notifications used to ensure that iOS or Android software is up to date, services are working as intended, and the phone is safe and efficient. ”
The report adds that according to the representative, the statement that Android users can refuse to share telemetry data is "inaccurate". Google believes that this data is essential for the normal operation of Android devices and that telemetry data is not handled based on Android usage and diagnostics.