This would be a phone for personal use, so there is no need for more than casual security. The thieves usually just fully reset them before selling.
That's the thing -- usually, the thieves
can't just reset an Apple before selling them on. That's how you end up with a ton of iCloud-locked stuff gumming up eBay searches.
I don't trust any company as far as I could throw them RE: privacy, but I will grudgingly admit that Apple
seems to have my interests more at heart than Google ever did.
Yes, iPhones are very expensive on release, but the equivalent Samsungs are comparable at best, and at worst charge more for objectively worse hardware. Google subsidizes the cost of their Pixel line I believe but it comes at the cost of even tighter Google integration and technically
the consumer subsidizes that cost by giving away their data.
Apple doesn't really do midrange offerings, they just keep offering older flagships at reduced prices -- my ip13 was on promo with my carrier for, I think, 300 dollars? Maybe 350 w/ taxes out the door? The 15 had just come out. I still fully expect my 13 to get updates well into 2027, if not 2028, and it's a 2021-2022 device. Like Chewy said, Apple has a more or less proven track record RE: software updates, where Samsung still hasn't fully satisfied a commitment they've made yet to my knowledge, though that they
have made a commitment is admittedly a good sign.
I still maintain that if my old XR hadn't had that annoying screen issue that would have cost more to fix than the phone was worth I'd still be happily using it right now. It wasn't slow or anything, and it still got very reasonable battery life for having been an old phone by the time I got it. My 13 lasts
multiple days with my usage on a battery only about 60% as large as the one in my work ZFold 4.
Like I said before, I want to hate Apple so badly, but I find the iPhone, specifically my 13, very difficult to hate. That's high praise for me for really anything.