For the first 15 years of Classic Mac OS, right up to Mac OS 9 in 1999, Macs remained fundamentally single-user, and privacy wasn’t an issue of

A brief history of privacy protection on Macs

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2024-11-09 17:00:11

For the first 15 years of Classic Mac OS, right up to Mac OS 9 in 1999, Macs remained fundamentally single-user, and privacy wasn’t an issue of much concern. In those halcyon years of desktop publishing and HyperCard, users were more excited by opening information up than keeping it private, and the internet was in its infancy. It was Mac OS 9 that first integrated multiple user accounts and started to secure information using keychains.

Mac OS X brought the first full multi-user operating system to the Mac, but as internet connections became increasingly common and lasting, little attention was paid to privacy. By 2011, the Privacy tab in Security & Privacy, then in System Preferences, contained just three items: Location Services, Contacts, and Diagnostics & Usage. While privacy features developed elsewhere, for the sake of simplicity I’ll here focus on that pane in System Preferences, and its successor in System Settings.

Four years later, in OS X 10.10 Yosemite (2015) and still in 10.12 Sierra (2017), those three items had grown to eight, with the addition of Calendars, Reminders, Accessibility, and two social media platforms, Twitter and Facebook.

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