Apple's new Journal app and other iOS privacy settings raise questions about data sharing. Recent social media discussions highlight a "Discoverable by Others" setting in the Journal app, enabled by default. Let's clarify its function and explore other default settings you might want to review.
Journal App Discovery
The Journal app (iOS 17.2 ) offers prompts for writing suggestions based on your activities. These suggestions, stored locally, are customizable via Settings > Privacy & Security > Journaling Suggestions. You can control categories like Contacts and Photos.
The "Discoverable by Others" setting, also on by default, doesn't share your journal entries. Instead, it allows other Journal users with suggestions enabled to receive prompts related to shared activities (e.g., "dinner with friends"). No personal identification is included; it's designed to enhance suggestion relevance. Disable it if preferred.
Significant Locations
With location services enabled, your iPhone logs "Significant Locations" by default. This data, end-to-end encrypted and inaccessible to Apple, informs features in Maps, Calendar, and Photos. Access and manage this data via Settings > Privacy & Security > Location Services > System Services > Significant Locations. You can clear or disable this feature.
Personalized Ads
Apple, despite its privacy focus, uses data (app usage, subscriptions, Apple News topics) to personalize ads. This involves segmenting users for targeted advertising. While potentially beneficial for relevance, you can disable this via Settings > Privacy & Security > Apple Advertising > Personalized Ads. Disabling this only affects personalization, not ad frequency. Review Apple's advertising policies for more information.
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