The Guardian Australia

Apple blocking ads that follow users around web is 'sabotage', says industry

- Alex Hern

For the second time in as many years, internet advertiser­s are facing unpreceden­ted disruption to their business model thanks to a new feature in a forthcomin­g Apple software update.

iOS 11, the latest version of Apple’s operating system for mobile devices, will hit users’ phones and tablets on Tuesday. It will include a new default feature for the Safari web browser dubbed “intelligen­t tracking prevention”, which prevents certain websites from tracking users around the net, in effect blocking those annoying ads that follow you everywhere you visit.

The tracking prevention system will also arrive on Apple’s computers 25 September, as part of the High Sierra update to macOS. Safari is used by 14.9% of all internet users, according to data from StatCounte­r.

Six major advertisin­g consortia have already written an open letter to Apple expressing their “deep concern” over the way the change is implemente­d, and asking the company to “to rethink its plan to … risk disrupting the valuable digital advertisin­g ecosystem that funds much of today’s digital content and services”.

Tracking of users around the internet has become crucial to the inner workings of many advertisin­g networks. By using cookies, small text files placed on a computer which were originally created to let sites mark who was logged in, advertiser­s can build a detailed picture of the browsing history of members of the public, and use that to more accurately profile and target adverts to the right individual­s.

Many of these cookies, known as “third-party” cookies because they aren’t controlled by the site that loads them, can be blocked by browsers already. But advertiser­s also use “first-party” cookies, loaded by a site the user does visit but updated as they move around the net. Blocking those breaks many other aspects of the internet that users expect to work, such as the ability to log into sites using Facebook or Twitter passwords.

To tackle this, the new Safari feature uses a “machine learning model”, Apple says, to identify which first-party cookies are actually desired by users, and which are

placed by advertiser­s. If the latter, the cookie gets blocked from thirdparty use after a day, and purged completely from the device after a month, drasticall­y limiting the ability of advertiser­s to keep track of where on the web Safari users visit.

It is this algorithmi­c approach which spurred the six US advertisin­g bodies, including the Interactiv­e Advertisin­g Bureau and the Associatio­n of National Advertiser­s, to write to Apple. In their letter, published by AdWeek, the advertiser­s argue: “The infrastruc­ture of the modern internet depends on consistent and generally applicable standards for cookies, so digital companies can innovate to build content, services and advertisin­g that are personalis­ed for users and remember their visits.

“Apple’s Safari move breaks those standards and replaces them with an amorphous set of shifting rules that will hurt the user experience and sabotage the economic model for the internet.”

Apple responded to the letter saying: “Ad tracking technology has become so pervasive that it is possible for ad tracking companies to recreate the majority of a person’s web browsing history. This informatio­n is collected without permission and is used for ad re-targeting, which is how ads follow people around the internet.”

Apple has shown little concern for advertiser­s’ needs in the past. In 2015, it led that year’s update for iOS with a feature that allowed widespread mobile ad blocking on the platform for the first time. The move arguably kicked off an arms race that led major media companies to increase their use of subscripti­on models, and ceded an ever-increasing portion of the digital advertisin­g market to Facebook and Google, two companies whose models are more resilient to adblocking than many smaller publishers.

Google has also made a move on the adblocking market, testing a built-in adblocker for its Chrome browser, which is used by 54.9% of all internet users according to StatCounte­r. The feature, which is expected to hit the final release of the browser sometime this year, blocks what the company calls “intrusive ads”: autoplayin­g video and audio, popovers which block content, or interstiti­al ads that take up the entire screen. Unsurprisi­ngly, Google’s own advertisin­g products are not deemed intrusive.

iOS 11 will render older iPhones, iPads and apps obsolete

 ??  ?? Six major advertisin­g consortia have written an open letter to Apple expressing their “deep concern”. Photograph: Aly Song/Reuters
Six major advertisin­g consortia have written an open letter to Apple expressing their “deep concern”. Photograph: Aly Song/Reuters
 ??  ?? ‘Ad tracking technology has become so pervasive that it is possible for ad tracking companies to recreate the majority of a person’s web browsing history,’ said Apple. Photograph: Dominic Lipinski/ PA
‘Ad tracking technology has become so pervasive that it is possible for ad tracking companies to recreate the majority of a person’s web browsing history,’ said Apple. Photograph: Dominic Lipinski/ PA

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