There's some truth in what you're saying, but mistrust of institutions is completely rational in light of history. Empirically, ignorance in this context would be unskeptically trusting institutions.
That it strays into the irrational at times is as human as the inevitable corruption that fuels the mistrust.
For someone without full knowledge of the technology to assume (in this case wrongly) there's a privacy issue is entirely practical. It's an assumption that will be correct far more than it won't.
People are responding to fear of past president. One could argue that it is highly unlikely that it will happen again. One could even PROVE that it is NOT happening again NOW - but you are still dealing with someone responding out of fear.
I feel like we are seeing the exact same phenomenon with (SOME) people who respond out of fear of catching the virus.
I would be really interested to learn more about why some people 1) are fearful of government tracking 2) are fearful of the virus 3) aren't fearful of either.
Personally I've watched my self move between all 3 over the past year - it has been a WILD ride
That it strays into the irrational at times is as human as the inevitable corruption that fuels the mistrust.
For someone without full knowledge of the technology to assume (in this case wrongly) there's a privacy issue is entirely practical. It's an assumption that will be correct far more than it won't.