Unfortunately you are 100% wrong and highly naive.
> But that does not come as default with the OS, and it requires active user participation, which makes your argument a bit of shifting the goal posts indeed -- Mac OS X does not send any data to Google by default, not out of the box ... There's zero tracking by Google unless you use one or multiple of a) a Google provided Web browser, e.g. Chrome, and b) use Google's Web services.
I have been perfectly clear about this:
> Not in source code not in network requests, zero.
You do realise that gstatic.com is a web service right that can be used for tracking.
The OP does not any Google requests, this includes gstatic, connectivitycheck.gstatic.com, Google owned IP addresses, DNS addresses and anything that can or could connect to or is affiliated with Google in anyway possible.
This includes Google baked into the source code that nobody asked for that can connect to Google for their own purposes. You have no clue what could change in an OS update with MacOS that you didn't ask for, and now with Apple is trying to work with Google to try and bake Google Gemini into their OS to power a voice assistant, an upcoming privacy nightmare nobody asked for. (0)
The fact that macOS is has Google integration baked into the OS with Mail, Calendar, Search, etc makes me not recommend it for anyone that cares about privacy.
> Your vague statements on "esoteric OS" are not helpful.
Here is a concrete example:
You can use the base Linux kernel as an example, there are zero sources of Google in there which can be used as the basis of an "esoteric OS" so it is a good practical starting point to base a proper "ZeroGoogle" OS. Not any standard distro.
I even said busybox at one point, but you chose to ignore that.
Windows has its own different tracking which the OP also doesn't want so that is a complete moot point.
If you are serious about privacy and don't want any Google tracking, you would use an esoteric OS.
(0) https://techcrunch.com/2025/08/22/apple-is-in-talks-to-use-g...