Honestly, they likely also suggest this in an attempt at privacy. For all their other faults, Apple has always championed security and privacy.
Comment on Apple Confirms Governments Using Push Notifications to Surveil Users
towerful@programming.dev 11 months agoThat said, some apps rather than sending your device the actual notification
Pretty sure that is actually the recommendation, as it reduces bandwidth for the notification servers.
I think the message payload is severely limited.
Like, pre-ios8 the limit was 256 bytes. Now it’s 2kb.
KairuByte@lemmy.dbzer0.com 11 months ago
whofearsthenight@lemm.ee 11 months ago
I didn’t know that. Hmm, sounds like it’s decently likely this is a bit overblown then. I mean, I suppose there are a lot of lazy companies out there that will skip this, but that severely limits the functionality in a way that it’s going to force the secure method.
towerful@programming.dev 11 months ago
It opens users to timing attacks.
If there are 1000 notifications per second. And across 100 incidents user A does something to cause a notification and user B receives a notification within network latency time periods, it is likely user A is talking to user B.
Whilst that seems like arbitrarily useless data, having this at the giga/peta scale that the US government is processing it, you can quickly build a map of users “talking” to users.
Now, this requires the help of other parties. You need to know that user A is using WhatsApp at the time. And yeh, you don’t know what the message is, but you know that they are hitting WhatsApps servers. And you know that within 5 minutes of User B receiving a notification, they are also then contacting WhatsApp servers.
So now you know that user A is likely talking to user B via WhatsApp.
And also user G, I X and M are also involved in this conversation.
And you busy user G on some random charge. And suddenly warrants are issued for more detailed examination of users A, B, I, X and M.
Maybe they have nothing to hide and are just old college friends. Or maybe they are a drug ring, or whatever.
It’s all the “I have nothing to hide”, phones being tied to a person, privacy and all that.
We can’t really comprehend the data warehouse/lake/ocean level of scale required to realise what all the little pieces of meta data and tracking information being able to add up to “User A is actually this person right here right now and they bought a latte at Starbucks and got 5 loyalty points” level of tracking.
Is it likely this bad?
Probably.
Theres the “Target knows I’m pregnant before told anyone” story.
forbes.com/…/how-target-figured-out-a-teen-girl-w…
That’s over a decade ago. It’s not let off. And you can bet that governments are operating at a level a few years beyond private industry.
So yeh, every bit of metadata counts