With iOS 8 on the horizon the Apple Lossless Audio CODEC (ALAC), hopes that we will trust some of our most personal and private data, The data that is related to our health. But also in the new functional iOS system, the developers from Cupertino don't seem to be able to do much with them errorthe lock screens that have been on the platform for years.
The last lock screen bug is one of the simplest and fastest to date. It's fast and easy to place, it only arrives for a few seconds and the device is as if it had never been locked. Fortunately, this bug only allows access to the latest open application. Of course, it continues to be quite dangerous as the last application could have been one that contains sensitive data.
In case you are one of Apple's fanatics and you can still find excuses for the lock screen detours, you should consider the following points.
First, Apple customers pay good money to the company for iOS devices. Second, no high-end device company would perpetuate a bug like this, and third, Apple is asking us to trust it more and more in our personal lives. The vulnerabilities of the lock screen probably indicate that the company does not understand the exact meaning of the word "trust".
If you still do not care about your data, what about the data of your employer, or your customers or friends stored on your device? Do you say that they too have the same relaxed attitude?
I hope not.
What is also worrying, in the news characteristics του iOS 8, είναι ότι το keyboard allows it to be used by third parties. Apple claims that these keyboards won't be able to spy on what we type, but by that logic, the lock screen is supposed to be there to lock the device, and yet it doesn't.
It's all theme trust. And trust is the easiest thing in the world to erode.