'Background App Refresh', And How Apple's iPhones Leak User Data To Trackers

If it's the privacy battle between Android and iOS, most people would agree that the latter is safer and more secured. But is it really?
If it's the privacy battle between Android and iOS, most people would agree that the latter is safer and more secured. But is it really?
When Google was born, it didn't really care which device agent is used when crawling a site.
When we were little, even the smallest crib can be huge. But when we outgrew it, we need something bigger to place ourselves in. The same goes for Facebook.
Opera browser may be as popular and as large as Google Chrome or Mozilla Firefox, but still it's competing to become the best browser out there in the market.
The wait for Intel's 10-nanometer chips is over, but people should not expect any huge performance gains from the 'Ice Lake' processors.
With the advancing technology, computer hardware has become smaller and more powerful. But to pursuit low-latency, things should go beyond that.
Websites on the internet gather information from browsers visitors use, with many of them creating a "fingerprint" to track users.
Creating something unique that none others have, can be an advantage. But in cases, it can also be trouble.
Developers aren't born rich, and many of them are working for a living.
Artificial Intelligence (AI) can be trained to be specific. But it seems that somehow the technology has excelled in one particular part. And that is creating fakery.








