Eureka! Eighty!

Late last October, Varya and I loaded up the old Lex and trailered Duca up through NE TX and a bit of OK to Eureka Springs, AR. The plan was for Sean & Keri to ride down from KC on his H-D and Greg to ride south on his KTM from StC for a couple days of hilly rides around Eureka. Unfortunately, an inescapably large, fearsome storm front on the horizon kept Sean & Keri in KC and forced Greg to ride home the next day to beat the deluge.

Before the storm, Greg, Varya and I stayed at the 1886 Crescent Hotel, basically an Ozark version of The Shining hotel, complete with an old, creepy vibe and ghosts of past horrors.

As Greg escaped on his Austrian, a little cold rain creeped into Eureka Springs warning of worse weather to come. Varya and I did a little damp shopping in the artsy/crafty town (OK, she shopped for baubles and beads while I sought a bar advertising “Husband Day Care Center”) before returning to the hotel to enjoy autumn afternoon views.

That night, we joined a Ghost Tour, in which a creepy old-timey nurse led us around our hotel while describing its haunted history. A fraudster once ran it as the Baker Hospital for Cancer Cure, preying upon rich, gullible, desperate patients who typically didn’t survive long enough to file suit. According to our “nurse” guide’s script, some may still roam the halls as spiteful spirits seeking solace. She invited us to take plenty of photos of specific rooms and slightly warped mirrors conveniently placed at the ends of halls, and to let the staff know if our phones caught anything spooky. Varya claims a blurred shape on the side of one of her pics looks like a child’s arm–perhaps the arm of the long-deceased child said to roam these halls! (I wasn’t convinced.)

Sadly, we saw no paranormal activity or apparitions on a tour that seemed a bit pricey for just a guided walk around the hotel–they could have rigged up a hologram or at least an eerie soundtrack. 😉 Perhaps the weirdest part of the tour was at the end…in the dark basement…with shelves full of bottled tumors removed from dead patients who apparently were not cured by Norman Baker.

After a couple nights in the so-called “Ghost Hotel” of Eureka Springs, we drove north into the expected big storm front. As Lex-rocking winds and torrential rains severely limited visibility, we slowly made our way across MO to Mom’s townhouse in Saint Charles by late afternoon.

Denied the Pig Trail and other famous Ozark roads by bad AR weather, Greg and I took advantage of the first clear, sunny day of the week by riding SW from StC in a big loop around central/southern MO. Greg’s been riding most of his life, and I’ve ridden for a couple decades, yet this was our first time riding together. After the wet, gray, abbreviated stay in Eureka Springs, this picturesque, spirited day ride through the colorful fall leaves of southern MO with my oldest schoolmate (at least a month older than me!) made trailering Duca all that way worthwhile.

Finally, the main event of the northern journey: on Mom’s 80th birthday, a couple dozen of her closest friends and family gathered at Tony’s on Main Street, perhaps the finest restaurant in St. Charles, to celebrate her eight decades on Earth. Tony’s excellent cuisine (oh, those medallions!) were well complemented by Scott’s cakes, Sean’s beverages, and everyone’s favorite stories about Jeanne, which Claire declared were to be shared while adorned with the Birthday Queen sash! 🙂

During the drive back south to Houston, I began noticing a strange sound, increasing with speed, coming from our right rear wheel. I eventually discovered thin wires sticking out of the walls just beneath the tread of our relatively new Kumho Road Venture tires. Discount Tire replaced it under warranty, of course, but call me a former fan of inexpensive Kumho tires from South Korea. Back to pricier Yokohama Geolandars!

Cute town and ghost hotel in the Ozarks, surviving severe weather, beautiful bike ride, and partying with octogenarians…not bad for a one week road trip!

Steaks!

What says American Independence Day in Texas more than a pan full of of choice cuts marinated all night, grilled on the back patio, served alongside Varya’s excellent side dishes and shared with Dad and Elaine last July 4th?! As my beef-loving, naturalized American Girl often says when passing a steakhouse or cattle ranch, “Mmmmmm…steaks!

Bandera Bandidos

April moto-mayhem in the Texas Hill Country seemed like the ideal way to try out Jerry’s new 2015 Honda Repsol SP before he headed north to Denver for new Sierra Nevada and Rockies adventures. Friday morning, Jerry trucked and I rode Duca west outta Houston to Bandera west of San Antonio, where we took our bikes for a quick afternoon loop north of Comfort. (The Rever app is good for creating GPX files for my Garmin Zumo, but way overestimates time required for distance–4.33 hours to cover 111.13 miles suggests a school zone pace under 26 mph…on a motorcycle! Really, Rever?!)

After a night of dining and moderate revelry in downtown Bandera, the real ride began Saturday morning. Zipping up 16 to Medina, we turned due west on Ranch Road 337, one of Texas’ infamous Three Twisted Sisters. North of Vanderpool, we stopped to check out the impressive private collection of 60+ vintage bikes at the Lone Star Motorcycle Museum. Soon we rolled into Leakey, pronounced “lay-key” as locals have corrected me, not leaky as it appears…as that might suggest a need for another little Texas town, Sealy. 😉

Just west of Leakey is the Frio Canyon Motorcycle Stop, a must-stop for any passing biker seeking parts, accessories, apparel, food, drink and live music. Judging by the amusingly similar bikes and trikes populating the parking lot, Harleys with 2 or 3 wheels are the all-too-common choices of the rugged individuals populating Frio’s live band and bar area.

We bought a couple shirts and souvenirs and continued west before some of the under-geared and over-lubricated Harley boys staggered back to their hogs. At Camp Wood, we turned north on RR 335, the second Twisted Sister, zipped east on 41, and turned south on RR 336, our last and perhaps curviest Sister. After navigating an especially twisty part (a Butler Maps G1 road), I parked beneath a shade tree in Leakey and waited for Jerry…and waited. Just as I was thinking of riding back north, he rolled in and revealed he’d experienced a little gravity attack in the middle of a tight turn. Fortunately, no serious injury and most of the bike damage was cosmetic, but a little oil leak was big enough to leave the Honda in Leakey while we rode 2-up on Duca (sadly without photo evidence) to retrieve his truck from Bandera.

Thus ended our moto-tour before we could ride NE to Kerrville, but not our big Saturday night in Bandera. We had a tasty dinner in a little joint with cold beverages and hot guitar licks by the impressively excellent Jake Castillo Trio out of San Antonio. From Hendrix to Stevie Ray Vaughan, Jake handled classic riffs and solos with veteran ease belying thousands of hours blues-rocking south Texas clubs and bars.

An old friend of Jerry’s joined us for Sunday brunch before Jerry drove to nearby San Antonio for Easter with family and I rode Duca back east to Houston and home, having enjoyed one last Hill Country moto-weekend before Jerry became a Colorado mountaineer.

Austin Knits and Twists

One glorious Thursday in early spring, Varya and I rendezvoused at scenic Lakeway Resort on Lake Travis for a long weekend getaway. While I rode my bike from Houston, she drove her convertible ‘Stang, knocking out her longest highway haul like a pro! At the resort, Varya modeled her expertly crafted colorful creations, evidently as one does at a knitting convention, judging by the many yarn-clad guests.

As she began her exciting weekend trading yarns with fellow knitters from around the globe, I spent Friday twisting around Lakes Travis, Marble Falls, LBJ, Inks and Buchanan on a Ducati (almost as thrilling as knitting), winding up in Erik’s & Liza’s garage with David and his BMW. As is customary at this 5…er…6-star west Austin resort, appetizers and aperitifs awaited our arrival.

Fortunately for us dinner guests, Erik grills some killer steaks and master chef Liza sets a lavish, delicious table, so our generous hosts spoiled us all. After much feasting and revelry, we retired to the poolside veranda and fire pit for digestifs.

The next morning, perhaps a bit later than planned, David and I suited up and rode westward for our all-day hill country moto-tour, looping around Luckenbach and Comfort before twisting back east to meet Erik and Liza at Salk Lick BBQ in Driftwood. Nothing hits the spot after several hours of riding like a big plate of BBQ buffalo ribs!

Thanks, Dave, for the great ride, and thanks again, Erik and Liza, for opening up your most excellent hill country home to flatland bikers!

Missouri Road Trip

In the week before Christmas, Varya and I drove north out of Houston and spent a couple days in Branson, MO. Advertised as a family vacation destination in the Ozarks, it seemed like a small, low-budget, poor imitation of Vegas without the fun parts. The Titanic museum exceeded expectations, however, handing you a “passport” for a real passenger when you enter so that as you walk through the authentic and recreated artifacts and rooms, you keep an eye out for clues as to “your” ultimate fate (not surprisingly, her 1st class lady survived, my 2nd class schmuck did not). The other “museums” in town underwhelmed. At night, we enjoyed the Shanghai Circus at Mickey Gilley’s Grand Shanghai Theatre, which was more multi-cultural than Chinese, with artists much more diverse than the audience. The performers were not quite ready for Cirque du Soleil, but their repeated mistakes were part of the fun, building to crowd-pleasing triumphs when they finally completed stunts successfully.

Farther north in gray St. Louis, we experienced Beyond Van Gogh in a mall parking lot. Gotta love Vincent, and the big room with the high-intensity, high-res projected animations of his work was truly immersive, albeit overpriced for a half hour show. Still, a fun little diversion.

Unfortunately, during our visit with Mom and Sis in St. Charles, Claire had to quarantine in a guest room and on the back deck to reduce the risk of infecting the rest of us with the COVID-19 she likely caught just before flying west from NY. Fortunately, she was fully vaccinated, so her symptoms were mild and short-lived. She participated in opening presents on Christmas Day via FaceTime on an iPad in the morning, and on the deck when Carla dropped by.

We spent another night in Branson during the long drive back south, taking in Dolly Parton’s Stampede dinner show with a variety of animals and human performers. Though it can be cute in a kitschy way, we can cross Branson off the list, as a few days there is plenty.

In past road trips to MO, we’ve overnighted in Memphis and now Branson. Next? I hear good things about Eureka Springs, AR…

Twistier Sisters

The cool and dry weekend before Thanksgiving was perfect for moto-touring through the Texas Hill Country. Carlos and I headed out of Houston Friday morning, zipping west to San Antonio on I-10 and on to Uvalde to spend an evening at America’s Best Value motel. After paying $90 for a 20th century tube TV, a bug-covered bathroom sink, a broken toilet handle and a very cold shower, I’d argue the motel was not much of a Value, much less the Best Value in America. But, it added “flavor” to a guys’ bike trip, and set us up to hit the notorious Twisted Sisters roads from the south via Leakey (pronounced “lay-kee”, not “lee-kee”, as I was corrected).

For some reason, Butler color-coding goes 1-yellow, 2-red, 3-orange

As we headed north from Uvalde to Leakey early Saturday in the cold morning air, I thanked the Italian moto-gods for heated grips. After some breakfast and much-needed coffee at a roadside taco truck in Leakey, we headed north on RR 336, west on 41, south on RR 335 to Camp Wood, and east on RR 337, returning to Leakey within 2 hours. We saw perhaps one other bike during that entire loop, headed the opposite way as we approached Leakey again, near the Frio Canyon Moto Shop that appeared closed. (Butler’s oddly ordered color-coding in the map above shows the twistiest, most technical roads in yellow, the next step down in red, and the next level of sweeping turns in orange.)

As we sat again at the same taco truck enjoying more tacos and coffee, a white-bearded older man in overalls chatted with us, ultimately offering us his condo in Leakey and cabin near Medina to rent for future hill country moto-tours. In response to the obvious question, “Why not advertise on AirBnB?”, he expressed his desire for greater selectivity because he “didn’t want that Harley crowd trashing things,” which made me laugh as he definitely looked like a Harley guy, not the more refined BMW and KTM biker he claimed to be (can’t judge a book…). So, instead, he scouted out nice bikes and riders he deemed “professionals” for in-person, targeted advertising. Not a bad approach, as I’ll likely contact him the next time I ride west of San Antonio.

Fully caffeinated and taco-ed, we headed east on RR 337 and north on RR 187 to the Lone Star Motorcycle Museum. A $7 entry fee enabled us to browse the private collection of over 60 bikes owned by Allan Johncock, an Aussie motorcycle enthusiast who moved to Texas. The several bikes sporting #346 were his personal race bikes, which he didn’t start racing until in his 50’s (never too old…).

Allan Johncock’s motorcycle collection and racing trophies

We continued east on RR 337 to Medina, where we saw more bikes than in the morning, though all headed west, the opposite way. We had to stop for apple/cinnamon/maple ice cream (oh my) at The Apple Store before continuing to make our way east and north on various twisty, rural roads, finally ending up at the famous, original Salt Lick BBQ in Driftwood for a most excellent, smokey carnivore dinner (oh my!).

Based upon the surprisingly few bikes we saw all Saturday, I’d say veteran hill country rider Carlos had a good approach for avoiding crowds on the Twisted Sisters:

  • Start very early in the morning at Leakey (grab some tacos from the truck), and ride counter-clockwise around the left loop in the above map. We saw almost no one this far west on Saturday morning.
  • Then hit the right loop, also counter-clockwise (stopping for ice cream at The Apple Store in Medina), as riders who start nearer San Antonio will be just arriving from the east, westward bound.

We spent Saturday night east of Driftwood, south of Austin, splurging for rooms at Studio 6, the “upscale” Motel 6…no Ritz Carlton, to be sure, but far better than ABV in Uvalde! The ride east to Houston started in dense fog Sunday morning, but was otherwise an uneventful cap on a nice hill country moto-tour weekend. Kudos to Carlos for joining the weekend tour, quickness through the twisties, and sage suggestions along the way (not counting ABV)!

MotoGP at COTA

MotoGP racing hooked me online even before I steered away from power cruisers like my old Triumph Rocket III and Honda VTX1800C to a Ducati Multistrada 1260S earlier this year. Perhaps watching young riders rocket through turns on 220mph GP bikes even had something to do with my switch to a sportier tourer. During the pandemic, I’ve watched quite a few races online, VPNing into European countries to watch “locally”, or waiting for Sunday afternoon replays on NBCSN or YouTube. (I guess I wasn’t so hooked as to spring for the expensive MotoGP VideoPass for live viewing–plus watching European races live means the wee hours in Texas, and I need my beauty sleep.) So, a few months ago, when the Circuit of the Americas (COTA) in Austin confirmed they’d be hosting the only American MotoGP event in early October, Austinite Erik and I jumped on full weekend passes. Turns out we didn’t need to rush, as biker buddies David and Edgar bought tickets just days before the event and joined us for a trio on Saturday and foursome on Sunday.

That first weekend in October was hot and mostly sunny, so we were glad to be sitting in the Main Grandstand Club section, one of the few shaded areas around the track with easy access to amenities such as the Velocity Lounge (for really fast food). Other grandstands around the track offered better views of twisty turns, but seemingly at the price of sunburns and heatstroke. So, I was duly lauded by our group for picking our Club section. Unfortunately, I was also relentlessly derided for not picking the adjacent parking lot A, but rather the cheaper and distant lot T. Apparently lower letter lots are what you want at COTA, which was surprisingly lacking in shuttles (saw several parked/empty, but never one in action…a COTA fail), so lot T made for quite a hike each day, especially leaving (all uphill). Not to mention the hour-long wait in the car just to exit lot T on Sunday afternoon (very poor parking lot traffic control was another COTA fail)…but I digress, back to the track…

Edgar, David, Steve & Erik decked out for MotoGP

If you really wanted to save money with General Admission tickets, there are hillside areas to drop a folding chair or blanket. Just be sure to bring your own shade in the form of umbrellas and hats.

David saved us by bringing enough tethered ear plugs for all four of us. The only MotoGP veteran, he was well aware of just how ear-shattering the unmuffled, unrestricted GP bikes are at full throttle. The rest of us newbies were very grateful for the ear plugs since we couldn’t find any being sold…at a race track (another COTA fail).

Ducati Island was the place to be for Ducatistas, offering new Ducati bikes to sit and drool on, overpriced Ducati gear for the price-insensitive, and even Ducati-only parking…filled with a long line of (mostly) red Italian bikes. Guess where I’ll be parking next year?!

Current & Aspiring Ducatistas

With immortal young riders pushing and occasionally exceeding the limits of their machines and tire traction, crashes are not uncommon in MotoGP, perhaps more so in Moto2 & 3 classes filled with teens. Fortunately, most crashes are “low sides” in which the bike and rider slide off the track and into the rock fields that slow them to a stop. While walking around the track, Edgar and I watched one Moto2 rider hop right up after sliding out on a corner and walk over to a waiting golf cart driven by a Medical Crew while waving to the fans, followed by a Track Crew who loaded his wrecked bike on a trailer, all within a few minutes. Glad to see the rider safe, and the efficient Moto-Cleanup.

Yellow smoke bombs filled the Paddock seats near the starting line shortly before the MotoGP race. We could smell it from our distant Club seats, so I wondered if the riders disliked breathing the cloud as they prepared for launch, even Rossi. But, moto fans gonna be (Grazie!) Vale fans.

Yellow Smoke pre-MotoGP

Just like last spring when Varya and I biked through the hill country, our host and hostess, Erik and Liza, were awesome! They graciously offered their west Austin home to us cheap crashers, feeding us great morning breakfasts and wining and dining us each night with Erik’s grilled steaks and Liza’s amazing cuisine. 5 Stars all around…soon to be 6 when the new pool is finished! 😉

We appreciate and thank you both, Liza & Erik!

Cord Cutting Cost Update

Unlike my lengthier Cord Cutting and Cost Cutting posts of 2018 and 2020, this is just a quick update on what I’m currently paying for streaming, internet, phone, security and other online services to help gauge how these have changed over the last few years in the greater Houston area. (Please refer to those previous posts for details, comparisons and rationales.) Monthly costs listed below include all fees and tax. A little over $200/month for all of these services is less than some friends pay for satellite or cable TV/phone/internet packages with Comcast, Verizon, or (perhaps worst of all) AT&T. So, I’m thinking cord cutting cuts costs along with improving choice.

Provider & Service NameService TypeMonthly Cost
Comcast Xfinity cable (400 Mbps)Internet Broadband$50
Apple One Premier
• Music
• TV+
• Arcade
• iCloud (2TB)
• News+
• Fitness+
Bundle
• Music
• Video Streaming
• Games
• Cloud Storage
• News & Magazines
• Fitness Videos
$32
Amazon PrimeBundle
• Fast Shipping
• Video Streaming
$11 ($120 annually)
Disney+Streaming$7 ($80 annually)
HBO Max (ad-free)Streaming$16
PBS PassportStreaming$5 (donation)
YouTube Premium Family (ad-free)Streaming$25
SiliconDust HDHomeRunBroadcast TVFree
SiliconDust HDHomeRun DVRBroadcast TV DVR$3 ($35 annually)
Audible Premium PlusAudiobooks$16
Mint Mobile (10GB/month)Mobile Phone$22 ($240 annually)
Google Voice with OBi200 (VoIP)Home PhoneFree
ADTHome Security$22
TOTAL$209
Monthly Cost Summary Table

Texas Twisters

As a gift of gratitude for supporting her highly successful Flatiron Full Stack Web Development Bootcamp in 2019, Varya gave me an Italian mistress named Ducati Multistrada. Out of love and appreciation, I treated my girls Varya and Duca to a Hill Country moto-holiday over the long Memorial Day weekend, staying with an old friend and former roommate, Erik and his fiancé Liza in Austin. I initially thought of riding the bike all the way from Houston, weather and holiday traffic be damned, but better thoughts prevailed and I rented a motorcycle trailer and packed up the SUV for a more comfortable mini adventure.

Ready to Roll

Erik and Liza have a big, beautiful, new house with an epic hillside view west of Austin, and generously provided us with the most excellent room, meals, drinks and banter for 3 days and 2 nights…5 stars! Inexcusably, I and the official trip photog, Varya, failed to get a single photo of our Best Hosts Ever, only the front of their Super BnB in a deceptive pic that hides most of the house. After a Saturday night of food-n-fun with friends, we awoke early Sunday morning, prepped the bike, dressed to thrill, and set out for the eastern half of what Cycle World and Butler Maps deem among the best rides in the US.

After a quick stop in Blanco for a map check, we strolled around the old German town of Fredericksburg and had brunch. Judging from her first pics, my pillion photog seemed very impressed by architecture.

From Fredericksburg, we dove south to Kerrville, veered west to Hunt, then southwest along some of the most beautiful and breathtaking roads of the day. In sun-dabbled woodlands we curved along lazy rivers full of soaked kayakers and soused floaters, finally riding a giant roller coaster of a road carved through huge hills south to Leakey, the westernmost point of our day trip, where we ate a late lunch of tasty roadside BBQ.

The twisty ride east to Vanderpool was among the most technical and thrilling of the day, with some of the most spectacular hilltop views. I was having too much fun to stop for photo ops, but will get some cool peak pics during our next visit. We zipped by the Lone Star Moto Museum, but didn’t have extra time to stop and play moto-tourists, so we continued east, again having some of the most moto-fun of the day. So much fun, in fact, that a very nice local constable invited me to stop and chat about speed.

Oops

A few minutes later–at a notably slower pace–we found The Apple Store in Medina where they sold no iPhones or Macs, but plenty of the best apple-cinnamon ice cream in Texas, perfect for a Ducatista and his pillion gal pal. A couple waffle cones of sweet-tart creamy goodness made everything better.

Some of the sharpest switchbacks of the day lurked in a short patch of 16 north of Medina. Shortly after gassing up in Kerrville, we caught a short and light drizzle of rain on the way back north to Fredericksburg…a little foreshadowing. On a little northern road parallel to 290, we stopped within an hour of Erik and Liza’s house to get some final shots and stretch the legs for a few minutes…perhaps just a few too many.

After avoiding inclement weather for the entire day, our luck finally ran out in the last couple miles, where the sky opened up and deluged us with a true Texas thunderstorm just a few minutes from shelter. So, during our 10 hours on and off the bike, the weather was 99% “yahoo!”, but ended in 1% “yikes!” Erik and Liza prepared for our drenched arrival with garage space and towels, and after a change of clothes, Varya crashed while I joined other lucky house guests, Doris and Chris, enjoying another great Liza dinner with fine wine and good company.

The next day, Liza fed us another nice breakfast, Erik pumped us with coffee, and both gave us a lingering “Chinese goodbye” in the early afternoon…big thanks again 3E & L! On our way out of Austin, Varya and I made one last stop at Slab BBQ and fondly recounted our favorite moments from a great Hill Country holiday weekend.

Thanks for the moto-memories, моя Сладость!

Transparency and Privacy

If you like your privacy, and controlling if and how online companies track you, you should like Apple devices. Of the biggest tech companies–including Amazon, Google, Microsoft and Facebook–Apple is the most privacy focused. They can afford to be “the privacy company”, given they make most of their money selling you hardware (with high margins), and they’re betting privacy is of great value to Apple customers. Some companies make money selling your history and preferences to advertisers, political groups, or more malicious organizations. Apple does not, and is helping you fend off those who do. Here are a couple recent examples of Apple’s focus on user privacy and transparency in data tracking.

App Tracking Transparency

Apple updated iPhone and iPad operating systems (iOS and iPadOS) to version 14.5 this week. Once you update your device to 14.5 (and you definitely should…right now…go ahead, I’ll wait), you’ll likely see more pop-up windows asking whether or not you’d like to allow your Apps to track you and your data. It may seem annoying at first, but the messages or short, simple, and welcome assuming you value awareness and control over your own data and privacy. Apple calls it App Tracking Transparency, and describes it in this short Apple video. For even better understanding, check out this 8-minute Wall Street Journal video in which Joanna Stern talks with Apple Software Engineering Senior VP Craig Federighi about the transparency & privacy features in iOS 14.5 and how they counter App & ad tracking.

App Privacy

If you’ve opened the Apple App Store recently on your iPhone, iPad or Mac, you may have noticed a new App Privacy section below Ratings & Reviews on any App page. In this area, Apple asks App developers to openly declare what data they collect on users who download and use their App. Some Apps don’t track you, and will say “Data Not Collected” in App Privacy, as shown below for Magnet for Mac.

Magnet collects no data

Unfortunately, some companies use their Apps to harvest a lot of your data, even data their Apps don’t need to work, often in order to sell your data to other companies or government agencies. Below is the App Privacy section for Google Earth for iPad. It makes sense that Google Earth might need your Location to place you on the Earth, but does it really need your Contact Info? Clicking on See Details shows what Other Data of yours is tracked by Google.

Google Earth collects much data

For over a decade, Apps simply took your data and sent it to online company servers for monetization, mostly without your knowledge. Technically, they had your consent since you tapped OK or Accept buttons at the end of absurdly long User License Agreements (ULA) that no one other than a corporate lawyer ever reads or understands…you remember agreeing, right?! Sneaky App developers count on your unwitting complicity in surveillance business models. Now, Apple is simply asking them to tell you what data they intend to collect before you download their Apps, and then to ask permission for data access when you first use their Apps on your device.

Who could argue against honest transparency? Facebook, of course. Facebook attacked Apple in the NY Times and elsewhere, claiming they were “standing up to Apple”. They are against App Tracking Transparency and App Privacy, implicitly acknowledging that giving users awareness and control of data tracking is bad for Facebook’s business. Given Facebook is the most egregious privacy offender on the Internet, with a long track record of tracking, exposing and algorithmically manipulating user data and behavior, it is no wonder they fear Apple’s transparency and privacy initiatives…and the scary possibility that Google and Android phones may follow suit under public pressure, once users get a little taste of privacy. “Wait, you want us to tell users how bad we are?! What if they don’t like being spied upon, exploited, manipulated?! We can’t keep growing to over 3 billion products…er…users being open and honest with them!”

Check out the long list of your data tracked and harvested by the Facebook App below. Do you really want Facebook monitoring and selling your Health & Fitness, Financial Info, Sensitive Info?! For a real scare, click on See Details to get a very long, scrolling, detailed list of tracked data that goes on for many pages…basically, there’s not much about you Facebook doesn’t want to track, sell, and possibly lose to nefarious clients and hackers as they have a habit of doing. Yikes! Who would choose that?! This scares Facebook: newly aware users saying “NO, of course not!”

Facebook collects the most data

A NY Times article this week reports that in a 2019 conference for tech/media moguls (Silicon Valley meets Sun Valley), Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg–still reeling from Facebook’s Cambridge Analytica scandal breaking the year before–asked the more senior Apple CEO Tim Cook for advice on how he would handle the fallout of such a debacle. Tim told him to delete the data collected outside the core Facebook App, and stop collecting such data from his users. Mark “was stunned”, as this would undermine his user-as-product business model, and may have been his first clue that Tim would not be his ally in the surveillance economy, that Apple was tacking to the more user friendly direction of transparency and privacy. Attaboy, Tim!