I believe this is something that regulation should address. Scooping up all this data should be a massive liability for companies. Depending on the severity of a hack or misuse of the data it should effectively bankrupt or significantly destroy profits of any company. But the OS should not completely prevent it.
There are a number of programs for power users on macOS that have stopped selling through the App Store or warn against limited functionality for apps bought through the store. There are also a lot of extremely useful apps for Android that work most effectively when your phone is rooted. Google's Safety Net has effectively made rooting a liability for all power users. When the OS provider is limiting what a user can do the device quickly devolves into an entertainment consumption device.
Bad actors should be treated as viruses and malware the same as they were before.
Equifax is exactly the kind of company that should have never existed, and should have never been allowed to exist.
The same with the Facebook app (+ Android permissions, because even Facebook can't do full evil without Google apparently). And it's going to be the same result. Nothing is going to change, neither company will suffer much, nobody is going to jail. So his counterpoint is valid.
There are a number of programs for power users on macOS that have stopped selling through the App Store or warn against limited functionality for apps bought through the store. There are also a lot of extremely useful apps for Android that work most effectively when your phone is rooted. Google's Safety Net has effectively made rooting a liability for all power users. When the OS provider is limiting what a user can do the device quickly devolves into an entertainment consumption device.
Bad actors should be treated as viruses and malware the same as they were before.