

When did the trade press become so protective of user data?
The Wall Street Journal ($) had the scoop, the fast-followers had the attitude (emphases mine):
- Cult of Mac: Apple forces Facebook VPN out of App Store for stealing user data
- Inquirer: Facebook pulls its data-slurping Onavo VPN app from iOS
- Forbes: Apple Pressures Facebook To Remove Its Data Farming VPN From The App Store
- BGR: Stop using the creepy iPhone VPN app that Apple just forced Facebook to pull
- Mashable: Facebook to pull its creepy VPN Onavo from App Store after Apple pushback
- iMore: Apple shuts down Facebook’s ‘Onavo’ iOS app and activity snooper
A sampler from the twittersphere:
Onavo is the VPN app that Facebook uses to decide what companies to either buy or copy their best features by looking at which sites/apps users are visiting via VPN. Not illegal but quite an ethical gray zone. Interesting that Apple has decided to ban it https://t.co/lIwSBBZk0k
— Dare Obasanjo (@Carnage4Life) August 22, 2018
33 million people need to brush up on privacy and security STAT
I’m…not really even sure how they thought they were being protected, when Onavo was literally packet-sniffing the “secured” data passing through THE ENTIRE TIME. “We’re Facebook, trust us”https://t.co/xsQewhbfuc
— AAPL Tree (@AAPLTree) August 22, 2018
In June @markgurman and I told you that Apple’s new app store rules could be targeting Facebook’s Onavo. https://t.co/KdCQHECC2j Now, consequences: https://t.co/1D1SsuqFg7
— Sarah Frier (@sarahfrier) August 22, 2018
I remember meeting Onavo in a Tel Aviv hotel lobby years ago, back before they launched. Impossible to imagine back then it would eventually become Facebook’s user espionage tool.
— Martin Bryant (@MartinSFP) August 22, 2018
There is an alternate history version of this story where Apple does this back in 2013 when it mattered, and when FB couldn’t use the data as intelligently to learn, grow and “borrow” from other companies https://t.co/dvGIX4ETwe
— Josh Elman (@joshelman) August 23, 2018
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