| ▲ | layer8 3 hours ago | |||||||
It’s not clear how it is significantly different from allowing apps access to your contacts, calendar, photos, and so on. And Apple doesn’t say that they merely need more time to properly implement it, the claim that they are unable to implement it without compromising privacy and security. And the latter I don’t really see, with the proper set of permissions presented in the way users are already used to. As an Apple user I feel more patronized than empowered here. | ||||||||
| ▲ | dwaite 3 hours ago | parent [-] | |||||||
> It’s not clear how it is significantly different from allowing apps access to your contacts, calendar, photos, and so on Those are allowed via contextual consent prompts, several of which are for specific contacts, specific photos you wish to share, and so on. Examples of the level of access an AI agent has include: 1. To read all indexed personal data from every app installed on the device 2. To perform actions in every supporting app on the device on the user's behalf 3. To read the current displayed apps for additional context as well as sensor data like current location If you were regulated such that you had to allow any organization this level of access, and if you were hand-tied in how much you could convey the seriousness of accepting that consent prompt to an ordinary end user, and felt that it would be you, not any legal authority, who would ultimately suffer the reputational and legal consequences for the results - what would your yes/no decision be on shipping the feature in that jurisdiction? | ||||||||
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