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1183 points robenkleene | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.211s | source
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AnonHP ◴[] No.24839212[source]
I trust Apple a lot more than I trust Google or Facebook, but this clamping down of the Mac without options for power users while officially stating that the Mac will remain a Mac is alarming and distasteful on the part of Apple.

With the transition to Apple’s own chips looming, it seems like the days of “a Mac is a personal computer and not an app console like an iPhone or iPad” will be over by the middle of this decade. All Apple devices locked down completely and Apple decides the limits of what users can do on devices. This model made some sense for mobile (where restrictions were gradually removed or workarounds provided), but the Mac is going in reverse.

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capableweb ◴[] No.24839623[source]
People keep saying "I trust company X a lot more than I trust company Y" but is "trust" really something that applies to companies at all? Feels weird to humanize companies in that way. If you trust a company, isn't it really that you trust the humans working at that company? So you should really say "I trust person X who happens to work at X today", as as soon as they leave, the trust went with them.

Companies are not people and cannot be trusted to act in any interest but profits. Any trust you feel towards a company is towards humans in the company, but let's not anthropomorphise companies (yet, until we have better AI at least).

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1. snazz ◴[] No.24840041[source]
You make a valid point, but it’s also worth considering how the stakeholders’ interests align with your own. Apple is in the premium hardware and value added services business, so its interests are aligned with mine with regards to privacy and producing a quality product. On the other hand, Facebook is in the ad business, so its interests are not aligned with mine on a variety of points.