6 iPhone Privacy Issues You Should Be Concerned About

Have you noticed the iPhone gradually embedding itself into every facet of your life? I use my iPhone to:

  • plan out my days
  • track my personal budget
  • exchange emails, phone calls, text messages, photos, videos, voice recordings, etc., with anyone
  • broadcast my location via Google Latitude and other location sharing services

Yet considering how much we use the iPhone to map out our personal lives, the unfortunate truth is that Apple’s iPhone is weak on privacy.

Some Improvements

Yes, Apple has addressed a couple of our privacy concerns with the iPhone.

  1. You now have the option to turn off SMS preview, a feature that displays an excerpt of incoming text messages, causing potentially humiliating situations.
  2. Also, you can now delete individual text messages on iPhone, whereas originally your only choice was to delete all messages from any given contact.

Top 6 iPhone Privacy Issues

While the above are certainly improvements, there is still a lot left to be desired in terms of privacy on the iPhone. Below are 6 iPhone privacy issues that you may not be aware of, but should be. Give them a look and decide whether it is still worth it for you to own or buy an iPhone.

Consider:

  1. iPhone Passcode Lock

    iPhone’s Passcode Lock can be hacked. In September of 2008, Jonathan Zdziarski broadcast a webcast showing the world how to hack into an iPhone that is guarded by a Passcode Lock (which you can toggle in Settings >> General >> Passcode Lock).

    The webcast on how to break a Passcode Lock was intended in part for law enforcement officers, but it can also teach thieves how to mine the data from iPhones they have stolen. If you have information in your iPhone that you consider absolutely private, you should know that intruders can easily crack your iPhone’s Passcode Lock.

    Besides the Passcode Lock preventing people from entering your iPhone, individual apps from the App Store sometimes have Passcode Locks, like the Balance app, which I use to track my budget.

  2. iPhone screenshot

    iPhone stores screenshots of your activities. To produce that shrinking effect that happens to your window whenever you press the home button, your iPhone takes a picture of your screen. It stores a copy of the most recent screenshot and then supposedly deletes it. But according to Wired, “anyone who understands data is aware that in most cases, deletion does not permanently remove files from a storage device. Therefore, forensics experts have used this security flaw to gather evidence against criminals convicted of rape, murder or drug deals, Zdziarski said.”

    The knowledge on how to dig up the screenshots from someone’s iPhone can certainly be used by law enforcement in the interests of society, but intruders with malicious intent can see your activity just as easily.

  3. AT&T does not protect your privacy. The sole authorized iPhone carrier in the United States assisted the National Security Agency in its illegal wiretapping scheme and was granted immunity from prosecution after the scandal was exposed.

    Yes, many mobile phones other than iPhone run on AT&T, but with iPhone you are transmitting much more personal data than you would on a more basic phone. If you’re an iPhone user in the US, it’s worth considering that AT&T cooperated with the NSA’s widespread wiretapping… some AT&T customers have left because of it.

    iPhone wiretapping

  4. iPhone embeds your location into photos. By default, photos you take on an iPhone 3G or 3G S are “geotagged” with the location where they were taken. Your latitude and longitude are recorded in your photos’ EXIF data based on a signal from iPhone’s GPS or possibly from cellular and WiFi triangulation.

    iPhone geotag in EXIF data

    My iPhone 3G used to ask me if it could use my “Current Location” when I would turn on the camera. Now my 3G S geotags my photos by default. To change how the iPhone uses your location, go to Settings >> General and toggle Location Services.

  5. iPhone does not let you lock down individual apps. Although the iPhone’s Passcode Lock can be hacked, as mentioned above, it would still be nice to be able to set a Passcode for just certain apps, like Messages, Email, and Notes, for example.
  6. iPhone text message preview

    iPhone has no option to hide the names of people who send you text messages. This concern was noted in the comments of my post How Has iPhone’s SMS Preview Gotten You Into Trouble?. There’s a big debate in that thread about whether people who care about text message privacy are just a bunch of adulterers, but I tend to believe people’s privacy motivations are their own business and if you want the option to hide names of text message senders, you should have it.

Worried About Your Privacy on iPhone?

There’s no question Apple needs to increase security on the iPhone. Some of these privacy issues require taking a hard look at the iPhone’s core software, but others are options that could simply be added to iPhone’s Restrictions in Settings >> General >> Restrictions.

What do you think? What are your privacy concerns about the iPhone? Please sound off in the comments and tell Apple why you want the iPhone to be more secure.

7 Ways iPhone CANNOT Replace Your Home Computer

In his post on eWeek titled The iPhone Has Replaced My Home PC, Cameron Sturdevant writes:

Will a generation that has grown up with high-powered smartphones but is confronted with either unemployment or low-wage jobs make a choice between a smartphone with a healthy dose of data plan and cable/DSL-based broadband Internet access?

Cameron claims that he would abandon his PC in favor of his iPhone except for one thing: “Netflix. I am completely addicted to the ‘watch instantly’ feature that allows me to view a movie on-demand.” Is that all?

Yes, the iPhone can replace your home computer for plenty of tasks like email, browsing and multimedia, but there are some things you still need a computer for.

Here are 7 things your computer can do that your iPhone can’t:

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3 iPhone Copy & Paste Solutions

iPhone’s missing copy & paste feature has been a complaint of many since I posted my first list of 25 things wrong with the iPhone nearly two years ago.

There’s no doubt Apple has improved the iPhone since it first debuted, but they have yet to acknowledge how critical a feature copy & paste is.

For the time being, there are a few workarounds for getting semi-effective copy & paste functionality on the iPhone:

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5 Ways to Save Money & Shop Smarter With Your iPhone

Shopping isn’t what it used to be for iPhone owners. With the Internet in your pocket and the functionality of some great iPhone App Store applications at your fingertips, you are now much better equipped to make intelligent purchasing decisions, whether shopping online or at an actual store.

Below are five ways you can improve your shopping experience using your iPhone:

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A Year Later: 25 Things STILL Wrong With the iPhone

iPhone problems

Nearly a year after I published my list of 25 things wrong with the iPhone, the post has grown considerably with nearly 100 readers adding comments to it.

By now Apple has addressed some of the problems with the iPhone, and I want to thank them for listening to our feedback, but also encourage them to continue to improve the iPhone, even past version 2.0. First:

10 iPhone problems Apple has corrected

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