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Apple is launching a new ad campaign today featuring the company's emphasis on health data privacy, headlined by a humorous new commercial voiced by actress and comedian Jane Lynch.


The new campaign centers around the fact that with people knowingly and unknowingly sharing more and more about themselves online, protection of private health information has become an increasingly important issue. With Apple's built-in privacy protections across its devices and services, the company is seeking to reassure users that their health data remains secure within Apple's ecosystem.

Apple cites four pillars of privacy that apply both generally at Apple and specifically regarding health data:

- Data minimization: Only the bare minimum of health data is ever transmitted to Apple's servers, reassuring users that the vast majority of the data can not be compromised.

- On-device processing: Related to the data minimization pillar, Apple has intentionally built its products and services to perform as much data processing as possible directly on users' devices, limiting the data that needs to be sent to Apple in the first place. For example, your health highlights and trends displayed in the Health app on your iPhone are all processed on your device, which means Apple can't see them even if it wanted to.

Shared-Health-Info-Feature.jpg

- Transparency and control: Apple says that data is only shared with explicit user permission, and the company has built clear permission prompts to give you fine-grained control over what health data you share with whom, as well as provide reminders about the data you are sharing. With HealthKit, third-party developers seeking to access your health data must provide rationale for needing that access, must include a privacy policy, and may not use your health data for advertising purposes or sell it. Any health data these apps receive via HealthKit goes directly to the apps and does not let Apple see it as an intermediary.

- Security: All health data is encrypted on device, with the exception of Medical ID data that can be displayed on your iPhone's Lock Screen to assist first responders and others who may need to assist you in an emergency. For users have turned on two-factor authentication and a device passcode, health data transmitted via iCloud is end-to-end encrypted, meaning that only you can decrypt it with a device that's also logged in to your account, and Apple can't see it unless you explicitly choose to allow it.

Apple's new health privacy ad campaign will be running in 24 regions around the world across broadcast media, social, and billboards this summer. The company has also published a white paper with an overview of how the Health app and HealthKit protect your privacy.

Article Link: Apple's Latest Ad Campaign Takes a Humorous Look at Health Data Privacy
 
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The other day I got a promo email from Amazon Clinic, promoting their wholly-owned One Medical chain of medical health clinics and some kind of special deal for primary care for Prime members. It felt very dystopian, I immediately trashed it. It's not the worst, but Amazon is pretty high on my list of companies I will not entrust my healthcare to.
 
iOS Privacy could be massively improved, just look at App Privacy Report to see all the connections apps are allowed to make, it's insane.
Not so much an iOS issue but what apps are doing and what people are allowing them to do. But the horse has left the barn on most privacy things. Unless there is something amazingly dramatic, it’ll be near impossible to claw back protections.
 
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iOS Privacy could be massively improved, just look at App Privacy Report to see all the connections apps are allowed to make, it's insane.

Huh? App Privacy Report is an important step to make the connections an app wants to make transparent before you even load it. It‘s entirely up to you to grant those permissions or look for another app.
 
Wait, waking up to pee is a health issue? What if you just drink a lot before going to bed? Is it better to *not* wake up?
My guess, it’s implied that waking up too many times throughout the night to urinate can possibly be a potential problem, particularly in middle-to-older men with prostate issues.
 
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This was actually pretty funny. Thumbs up Apple. My paranoid self is still a little hesitant to be using the health app the way Apple wants you too..
 
They do. The polish is not the issue with iOS. The obsession for polish in iOS may even be more of an issue than the lack of polish.
Excuse me, what? Have you used an Apple OS in the last six years? Mojave is the last one they released that can be described as “polished.” Everything since has been a clanky mess.
 
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