Privacy and better safety they are not the same thing, although they are related. Privacy is that your data remains yours and is not shared or transmitted without your knowledge. Security is about keeping your computer or device from being hacked and infected.
Apple has created a system called Gatekeeper, which is designed to ensure that only secure software runs on your Mac.
Unfortunately, the makers of Gatekeeper used standard Internet protocols to implement this security feature, meaning they chose to send data without encryption.
Not only is data sent unencrypted, but Gatekeeper intentionally bypasses VPNs, which means you can't hide your activity even if you try too hard.
It's hard to say how many users it affects, but it's likely over 100 million. Apple CEO Tim Cook announced that there were more than 100 million active Macs worldwide at the end of 2018. Apple shipped nearly 18 million Macs in 2019, and likely more than that in 2020, as laptop sales surged due to the increase her work from home. All Mac owners running Mac OS X Catalina (released 2019) or later models they use Gatekeeper, whether they know it or not.
The content of the privacy leak isn't particularly terrible: it's not your name, passwords, credit cards, biometrics data or something similar. It's a constant window into your daily behavior that most Mac users don't know exists.
In the US, it is illegal for Apple to keep your data confidential from the government if requested by the government. The US government does not ask for them very often: Apple's transparency report shows that from July to December 2019, the US requested data from Apple to its customers 5.271 times. The 2020 requests have not been notified yet.
In addition, Apple has promised to launch a new encryption protocol for authentication checks and a new arrangement for customers so that they can be exempt from Gatekeeper security protections.