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At least with Chrome (and stock chromium, IIRC), you don't have to sign into the browser. If you sign into any Google property, the browser will use that auth to log you in.

Firefox does not, but it sure prompts the hell out of you to do so.



In Chrome Settings, You and Google, Sync and Google services, there's a toggle "Allow Chrome sign-in", which says "By turning this off, you can sign in to Google sites like Gmail without signing in to Chrome".


Sure. But it's on by default, isn't it? Just like Apple's upload is on by default.

Also, chromebooks require such a sign-in as well, and I'll bet they enable that syncing by default as well.

Singling out Apple here is kinda silly when they're encrypted (if you don't trust Apple to tell the truth there, running their OS at all is risky), and when the behavior is that which we'd expect.

And at the end of the day, using Apple's password manager is mostly (exceptions including wifi passwords) optional.


> Just like Apple's upload is on by default.

The blog post is about how it was off and then got silently toggled on.

> Singling out Apple here

I'm not a journalist covering tech companies. I'm an Apple user complaining about something that happened on my own Apple devices. It's silly to characterize that as "singling out Apple".

I do use Chrome, though, and it never silently switched that toggle back on. If it did, I'd definitely blog about that.




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