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Businesses Security Apple IT Technology

Tech Companies Need To Take Responsibility For the 'Chaos' They Create, Tim Cook Says (thehill.com) 225

Apple CEO Tim Cook said Sunday in a commencement address at Stanford University that technology companies need to take responsibility for the "chaos" they create. From a report: He did not name specific companies in his speech, but referenced several reasons that tech firms, particularly social media platforms, have come under scrutiny in recent months. He also made an apparent reference to embattled health startup Theranos. "Lately it seems this industry is becoming better known for a less noble innovation -- the belief you can claim credit without accepting responsibility," Cook said, according to videos posted online of his speech. "We see it every day now with every data breach, every privacy violation, every blind eye turned to hate speech, fake news poisoning out national conversation, the false miracles in exchange for a single drop of your blood," he added. "Too many seem to think that good intentions excuse away harmful outcomes, but whether you like it or not, what you build and what you create define who you are. It feels a bit crazy that anyone should have to say this, but if you built a chaos factory, you can't dodge responsibility for the chaos."
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Tech Companies Need To Take Responsibility For the 'Chaos' They Create, Tim Cook Says

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  • by SuperKendall ( 25149 ) on Monday June 17, 2019 @12:50PM (#58776236)

    I can think of no better way to describe Twitter than "Chaos Factory". That is what a vast majority of it is used for these days, even if you can use it for other things...

    It's not a great term for Facebook though, there's some deeper problem there that I wouldn't describe as chaos... but some form of poison may be close.

    • So does a $999 monitor stand count as chaos?
    • I can think of no better way to describe Twitter than "Chaos Factory."

      I'd say: I can think of no better way to describe Humanity in it's current state, than "Chaos Factory."

      Don't shoot the messenger. Humanity itself is at a very low point.

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • by dcw3 ( 649211 )

          Depends upon how you define it. Clearly, we're much better off in a number of ways...tech, unemployment, civil rights, etc. But, we've (in the US) never in my lifetime (60 yrs) been so divided. We've never been so monitored. It's never been so crowded (my commute went from 20 min to over an hour in the last ten years). I'd argue that in most urban areas, people rarely know their neighbors...I grew up in Detroit, and knew the names of nearly everyone on our city block in the 60s. So, I'd say there a mu

        • When was there a better time? I'll wait...

          There was a time when not everyone would have such a knee-jerk reaction to "humanity is at a low point", as you just did. Those are the days I'm talking about.

  • Tim Cook is ... (Score:2, Insightful)

    ... a salesman. "Our competitors are evil, so we're an alternative, OK?"

    He's given this same speech elsewhere. It's a broken record.

    Apple is losing to the competition, so it's a marketing strategy.

    • Re:Tim Cook is ... (Score:5, Insightful)

      by jellomizer ( 103300 ) on Monday June 17, 2019 @01:11PM (#58776406)

      The Chaos is from Social Media companies, Apple is a hardware company. Despite a few flame wars of Apple products vs their competitors products, they really don't create the Chaos that is Social Media today. Because Apples Business model is far more traditional.
      Make a Product, Sell a Product at the price it takes to make it + a Profit Margin which is consistent to the amount of demand and the number that can supplied.
      They also sell like a retail store other peoples software, music, books... On their store which they intern take a percentage of the profit.

      Social Media, is an advertising company, so they make money off of selling its viewers to advertisers. So the more viewers they get the more money they make. People have a hard time not gawking at a train wreck, so Drama, Extreme Views, Good Guys vs Bad Guys. All equal profit.

      Now the likes of Google are a problem with Apple, Because of Googles business model of advertising first, and Product second, means it can sell their products for less, because it pushes you to use their platforms and make money from that. Vs Apple who has to charge more for their devices, because they make money from the device and not so much from the adverting.

      (YES Apple has its adverting services, which is often used by 3rds party apps, so they can make money from free Apps, but Apple doesn't really care on how successful the App is. So if it creates conflict or not isn't Apples concern).

      So Apple is in a good position to vilify their competitors for creating problems that apple doesn't and is on a good position to rebuke them. Because if there is fallout it just will not affect them as much.

      • The Chaos is from Social Media companies, Apple is a hardware company.

        Nonsense. Can you spell I-O-S?

      • Apple is a "Chaos Factory" anyway...
      • Re:Tim Cook is ... (Score:5, Interesting)

        by Solandri ( 704621 ) on Monday June 17, 2019 @03:38PM (#58777422)

        The Chaos is from Social Media companies, Apple is a hardware company.

        Apple is a marketing and software company. They make very little hardware. The Macbooks are made by Quanta; they're an ODM [wikipedia.org]. (Original design manufacturer - they're like an OEM except they also design the product.The vast majority of laptops are made by ODMs, not their brand names.). Back when the unibody Macbooks first appeared, there was a pretty interesting article about how Quanta had bought a bunch of new CNC machines and were playing around with them. And thought they could use it to hog a laptop chassis out of a solid chunk of aluminum, so they pitched the idea to the customer they thought would be most receptive - Apple. It wasn't an Apple innovation as is widely believed. (The plastic Macbooks and the older Powerbooks were made by Asus). The iPhones are made by Foxconn - more people know that because Foxconn shows up in the news more often. Apple seems to dump blame for any iPhone problems onto Foxconn, while claiming credit for the good things. The only hardware I know that Apple actually makes are the Ax processors. Oh, and their fingerprint sensors - they bought the company which makes those back in 2012. (Then created chaos in the industry by dropping support for millions of fingerprint sensors installed in other brand laptops. I couldn't even download previous updates for the drivers after an OS reinstall because Apple took down the original website. This was a major problem because the software had to be updated to work with the certificates on newer browser releases.)

        The thing which most distinguishes Apple's products is their software. The original iPod's hardware was substandard ("No wireless, less space than a Nomad, lame."). What made it a success was the software integration with iTunes which solved the problem of synchronizing music on your PC with music on your MP3 player. Same for the Macbooks - the hardware is rather middling, suffering from overheating and mediocre or even consumer-hostile specs (e.g. soldered RAM and storage). But the software includes such gems like the best trackpad, best backup interface I've seen, and arguably the best UI overall. And the iPhone introduced the App Store as an alternative to buying software in a box at a retail store and installing it by connecting your phone to a PC.

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • Now the likes of Google are a problem with Apple ...

        Isn't that kinda what I said?"

    • Will apple release a notebook with a working keyboard again ?
      the four last model years just fall appart.
      Speak about chaos.

    • by ddtmm ( 549094 )
      But he's still right.
  • by Drethon ( 1445051 ) on Monday June 17, 2019 @12:56PM (#58776274)

    When you write code to hack into private data servers, yes anyone who knows what the software is being developed for is responsible. When you write a machine learning algorithm meant for finding cancer indicators in a legitimate set of medical data released by the patients, and the tech company gets sold by some investor or something that sells the algorithm to an insurance company to raise premiums on someone who might get cancer, no only the person who sold the company might be responsible if they and any indication as to how the software would be used.

  • just like the other Tech giants are. Pointing fingers at everyone else going, they are worse. This is not an apple rant. Just pointing out that none of them want to be the primary focus, and are trying to do everything they can to insure that through diversion.
    • by geekoid ( 135745 )

      Apple has been a really good player over all for it's history.

      And I hate Apples walled garden.

  • by enigma32 ( 128601 ) on Monday June 17, 2019 @01:00PM (#58776304)

    Soooo..... he's calling out all of the big tech companies except his own?

    How about being responsible for all of the junk generated with their planned obsolescence and yearly upgrades for new features that are either worthless or should have been there before anyway? Their users' privacy that is exposed by a services company claiming to be able to break the security on any iPhone?

    • by cyber-vandal ( 148830 ) on Monday June 17, 2019 @01:34PM (#58776574) Homepage

      What planned obsolescence and what new features does my 6s not have that would require me to buy an iPhone Excess? I get regular updates from the manufacturer, unlike many Android phones despite my phone being nearly 4 years old. So does my dad's 5s, despite being nearly 6 years old.

    • by MikeMo ( 521697 )
      What, they should stop inventing new things? Just ship the same phone forever?
    • Yep, I concur.
      Apple is not even willing to fix long lasting design issues like laptop keyboards that fall appart.
      That's plain, calculated, and short sighted obsolescence.

    • by dcw3 ( 649211 )

      Um, no. As the article says "He did not name specific companies in his speech". He did not exclude Apple in any way.

  • by The Snazster ( 5236943 ) on Monday June 17, 2019 @01:01PM (#58776318)
    Whoever invented cars is responsible for every time someone ran a red light and caused an injury?

    That's going to be on heck of a class action lawsuit. Now apply it to guns, kitchen knives, toasters, frisbees, toilets, ships, bungee cords, disco . . . this is ridiculous.

    Whoever invented fire is in some serious trouble if they are expected to be responsible for all the people and property that have been burned by it.
    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by geekoid ( 135745 )

      When a car is harmful, they do become responsible to make changes.

      "guns"

      Any excuse for idiots to bring guns into a conversation is a good one, amirite?

    • Whoever invented cars is responsible for every time someone ran a red light and caused an injury?

      Today, no.

      But what if the car maker includes instructions on how to kill pedestrians?

      Furthermore, what if car companies repo cars of people not willing to run run lights frequently enough?

      What if cars came with counters than rang pleasantly and gave you access to better cars every time hit a pedestrian?

      That's kind of like what is happening on Twitter. Mobbing is encouraged because then counts are driven up acro

    • Fire was "invented" long before apes or large mammals evolved. But you are correct in that people who implement fire to burn property are in serious trouble.
    • And plastics - whoever creates it should clean it up? Ditto, oil, coal, mining, etc.??
    • No, of course not. But what about a company whose manufacturing process sends pollutants into the environment? That seems more comparable to a tech company whose platform injects chaos and disruption into society as part of its operation.
    • it's the marketing of something known to be unsafe. I can invent car all day long. As soon as I build and sell one I'm subject to a ton of regulations meant to protect people from shoddy products.

      My car is regulated for my safety and the safety of other's on the road. Why should Twitter, Facebook et all get a pass? At the very least they should have to identify their advertisers and the country they come from.
    • by dcw3 ( 649211 )

      I think the implication is that places like Facebook may (or may not) have started out with only the intention of connecting everyone, but have turned into an active "chaos factory", and Facebook is actually profiting off of it today. Google as well. So, not necessarily who invented the tool, but who owns the market today should be doing something to mitigate the "chaos".

      Cook and a lot of anti gun folks would argue the same might go for guns...I wouldn't. The carpenter doesn't blame the hammer when he fu

  • by tomhath ( 637240 ) on Monday June 17, 2019 @01:08PM (#58776378)
    Social media is chaotic because the users act chaotically. Don't be surprised if Facebook sells your personal information after you gave it to them. Don't be surprised if millions of people react to tweets if you are on twitter reacting to tweets. Don't be surprised if news sites keep spewing fake news clickbait if you are the one reading the fake news and discussing it on Twitter.
  • by geekoid ( 135745 ) <dadinportlandNO@SPAMyahoo.com> on Monday June 17, 2019 @01:15PM (#58776436) Homepage Journal

    " embattled health startup Theranos."

      You basically had a woman build a Cargo Cult of Steve Jobs.

    She imitated all the personality of Steve Jobs that is in the culture under the premise something would happen.

    Disregarding the fact that SJ and SW actually based there product on reality.

    Theranos is fraud, and doesn't belong in this conversation. Cook should just go back to logistic; he was brilliant at that. As an innovator he is.. lacking.

  • by alispguru ( 72689 ) <bob,bane&me,com> on Monday June 17, 2019 @01:47PM (#58776686) Journal

    Collected data should be a liability in addition to being an asset - there should be significant penalties for leaking collected data.

    For example, why is Equifax still in business? They were responsible for arguably the biggest and worst release of personal data ever, but they got away with the standard one-year-of-credit-monitoring penalty.

    They should have been held liable for every loss due to identity theft for the year after the breach, whether traceable to their breach or not. They deserved financial ruin, and short of a really impressive class action lawsuit result they aren't going to suffer any significant penalty.

    • Hint, it's money.

      Here's their lobbying spending by year (the chart can take a moment to load):
      https://www.opensecrets.org/lo... [opensecrets.org]

      And it's no surprise to see their lobbying efforts this year we for a Bill titled:
      Economic Growth, Regulatory Relief, and Consumer Protection Act

      (I like how regulatory relief and consumer protection can coexist in the same bill)

  • Ok... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Waffle Iron ( 339739 ) on Monday June 17, 2019 @01:52PM (#58776732)

    I presume Apple will now be taking responsibility for the chaos they created when they started the trends like soldering down batteries, omitting headphone jacks, and the war on independent repairs?

  • ...Fake, propaganda MSM news that was causing the chaos. Not that the Tech industry is not guilty of ethics violations as they most certainly are http://3seas.org/EAD-RFI-respo... [3seas.org] but social media still just the vehicle the chaos is transported on like the carrier wave of a radio station (AM/FM) doesn't care what the signal it is carrying.

  • How about taking responsibility for those fucking butterfly keyboards? Stop trying to fix a goddamn flawed design and go back to regular keys that still work even with 1mm of dust packed under them.

  • Just this weekend my son was trying to think of a name for his newly band...I am going to suggest this to him.
  • Failing, incompatible hardware: https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com] and otherwise locked down and incompatible APIs so hardware and OS are not compatible and interoperable with PCs, Linux and such?
  • by phalse phace ( 454635 ) on Monday June 17, 2019 @04:16PM (#58777688)

    "Too many seem to think that good intentions excuse away harmful outcomes, but whether you like it or not, what you build and what you create define who you are."

    Tim Cook is a hypocrite.

    Apple Is Telling Lawmakers People Will Hurt Themselves if They Try To Fix iPhones [slashdot.org].

  • by King_TJ ( 85913 ) on Monday June 17, 2019 @06:20PM (#58778560) Journal

    All of his propaganda about Apple taking responsibility that other tech companies haven't is just that ... a bunch of marketing, feel-good crap.

    I'm a long time Mac user myself (back to 1999 or 2000 or so, at least), so I'm not saying this as one of those "anti Mac" guys out there. But first off? Comparisons to Theranos? That was just a company intentionally defrauding people once they realized they promised a product they couldn't actually deliver on. There will ALWAYS be those situations out there, in all types of businesses. Apple may as well bring up Solyndra or Enron, or maybe Elio Motors if that's the discussion topic. But who cares? We know Apple is a well established company that doesn't just hawk vaporware ... so it's a lousy comparison.

    While Apple tries to pitch the idea that they take security more seriously than everyone else (oops... looks like Cellebrite announced they can crack ALL versions of iOS on iPads or iPhones now to extract your data) ... they still insist on selling people hardware that's practically impossible to do self-service on or upgrade. They keep fighting "Right to Repair" legislation that's pro-consumer and pro small service businesses.

    Frankly, I don't make ANY purchasing decisions about my technology choices based on virtue signaling by a company's CEO. Yeah, yeah, Tim... that's great you supported gay marriage. Know what? As a libertarian, I'd support government getting OUT of the business of licensing marriage, period! ANY couple who wants to get married should be able to just do so, and government's only task is to record it for their records. It's stupid that we keep fighting for permission for various types of marriages, one at a time (such as interracial marriages).

  • on The Apple Campus Landfill anytime soon?

  • While some tech companies certainly deserve to be called out for some of their policies, products, or activities, it seems the more complete truth is that corporations in general need to exist for the general good, e.g.: they cannot be functionally sociopathic or governed by sociopaths because their ability to produce harm is amplified by their size, influence, and power. But isn't it also true that individuals have a responsibility, a duty, to withhold their patronage from corporations that have committed
  • Of all the tech titans, Apple's business model skews the furthest toward in loco parentis.

    There's a lot of money to be made gently nudging young adults who don't know how to cook for themselves to the clean and safe fast-food wicket funnel.

    What tends to remain undiscussed is whether Apple operates in this space as the kindly schoolmaster or the wicked stepmother. About 40–60 by my estimate.

    Kindly schoolmaster:
    * only 10% as much of a malware Petri dish as Microsoft Windows (which is nice, but hardly ro

  • will halt all future actions on behalf of the Chinese Communist Party's ultra-Orwellian system called the Social Credit System? ? ? [Now installed in Ecuador, Venezuela, certain African countries and 'stans.)
    https://www.theguardian.com/wo...

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