The article lists settings to change on Android 14 and iOS 17.
According to the author:
Recommended setting changes reduce the amount of data submitted to device manufacturers, cell carriers, or app developers and improve device security against common threats, such as those posed by nosy people who find the device unattended or by common malware.
By enabling all of these settings, you are significantly reducing the amount of tracking and data collection these devices perform, but keep in mind that you are not completely eliminating it.
So if an iPhone gets stolen, would having Find My completely disabled actually be a bad thing if we’re trying to improve device security? I see that’s listed in the article.
Would this affect the ability to use the remote lock & wipe functionality?
The setting you’re mentioning i.e., Apple ID > Find My: Disable everything1 has superscript i.e., 1 attached to it. The superscript leads to the following note:
I’m not the writer of the article, but I think that this note makes it clear that you can configure this setting according to your threat model.
Ah yes. I missed that bit. Thanks :)