Am 03.08.2016 um 21:13 schrieb Aardvarks:
> On Wed, 3 Aug 2016 11:04:13 +0200, Michael Eyd wrote:
>
>> You didn't prove that the ID is actually wiped out.
>
> I am a scientist.
Questionable. Very questionable, indeed.
> 1. Like any true scientist, I provide my hypothesis that iOs is less
> private than Android when it comes to being able to easily *eliminate* the
> advertising ID. And, like any true scientist, I provided numerous
> references which backed up my claims and which supported the experiment
> that I devised and published out in the open.
The only thing you've proven is that this ID is now not to be seen
anywhere in any of the Android Settings dialogues. But that does not
mean at all that it is gone from the system. You still don't understand
the difference between data being present in the system and data being
presented to a user.
> 2. Like any true scientist, I provided the exact steps to my *experiment*,
> which anyone on the planet can reproduce with any similar Android phone
> (mine is an S3 on Android 4.3).
Those steps are fine, just that they don't prove your claim at all.
> 3. And, like a true scientist, I provided the results and conclusion that
> the advertising ID was trivially easily completely eliminated from the
> Android system.
Your conclusion is wrong (resp. cannot be based on your findings), and I
pointed that out. Actually, that's what scientists do when reading other
scientist's claims: Try to find weaknesses in them and point them out.
> Like any true scientist, I know *more* needs to be
> explored, such as the question of whether the Advertising ID is hidden
> somehow,
Which directly contradicts your 'conclusion' that it's completely gone
from the system. So now you're pulling back on your claim.
> and that similar tests need to be performed to see if it is as
> easy to eliminate the advertising ID on iOS as it was on Android.
>
> This is what scientists do.
Right, but not the point in question. You're changing subjects, again.
> This is fact.
>
> Now, what do *you* provide?
I provide what any good scientist provides: A fair criticism of the
weaknesses of your claim. And I let the scientific community decide what
they think of my findings. Actually, that's what's called 'scientific
process'.
> Words?
> Tht's it?
> Just words?
I don't need anything more to debunk your conclusion as 'not based on
the given facts'.
> You are not a scientist.
At least as much as you are.
> You, and nospam and Savageduck and tlvp, etc., are merely iOS apologists
> who don't like the fact that it's trivially easy to completely eliminate
> the advertising ID on Android, while it's probably almost impossible to do
> the same privacy tweak on iOS.
So here we go again: Once you've proven wrong (like we did time after
time on numerous occasions) you start insulting people. That's
definitively not the behavior of a scientist.
>> And as for iOS: I have an easily reachable menu in the Settings app,
>> where I can (and have ;-) ) denied Ad-tracking, and where I can even
>> reset the ADID (by generating a new one).
>
> Heh heh ... you really felt the need to say that?
> Really?
Nothing more to hold against that? It must really upset you...
> Even nospam and Savageduck and tlvp didn't feel the need to say that what
> you have on Apple iOS is the same as what every Android user already has
> with respect to *resetting* the advertising ID and telling advertisers not
> to use it.
Then why do you care? Just leave that part of my answer unanswered - but
that wouldn't fit your need to be right on any occasion... ;-)
> You probably don't even *understand* what I just wrote - but I'm sure
> nospam (who, despite his constant baseless lies, actually *does* understand
> everything that I write).
I do understand much more than you, including a lot about you. :-)
Michael