Bangkok Post

Apple ups privacy controls

New iOS and macOS jam web-tracking tools

- GLENN CHAPMAN

SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA: Apple Inc on Monday unveiled new operating systems for its iPhones and computers with features designed to thwart the use of secret trackers to monitor people’s online activities.

The announceme­nt by Apple comes amid a growing focus on protecting privacy following a Facebook data scandal and new rules being enforced by the European Union for online services.

Apple, kicking off its annual developers conference, appeared to be setting itself apart from Facebook, which has drawn the ire of privacy activists, and even showed how its software could prevent the social network from tracking users on Apple devices.

“The upcoming versions of software powering iPhone and Mac computers will block the use of so-called ‘cookies’ from Facebook ‘like’ buttons that can follow people from one website to another,’’ Apple said.

“Turns out ‘like’ buttons and ‘comment’ fields can be used to track you, so this year we are shutting that down,” Apple senior vice president of software engineerin­g Craig Federighi told a standing-room crowd of some 6,000 developers at Apple’s Worldwide Developers Conference in the heart of Silicon Valley.

New MacOS Mojave and iOS 12 software to be released later this year will also make it harder to use trackers to create “unique fingerprin­ts” by gleaning data about devices being used, according to Federighi.

“It will become dramatical­ly more difficult for data companies to identify your device and track you,” he said.

Enhanced privacy was part of a slew of

improvemen­ts touted by Apple to developers, whose creations are key to the popularity of iPhones, iPads and Mac computers.

The conference kickoff came the same day The New York Times reported that Facebook gave special access to device makers, including Apple, to personal data on social network users and their friends.

Facebook said it “disagreed” with the

report and that the agreements with device makers were far different from those with third-party developers including one which shared data with the political firm Cambridge Analytica.

Apple’s software upgrades also include features that help users understand how much time they are spending on their devices, amid concerns of growing Federighi said.

Along with ways to limit distractin­g notificati­ons from iPhones, a new Screen Time feature allows people to more tightly control and monitor time spent in applicatio­ns.

“We know there are people who would like extra help,” Federighi said of curbing app time.

Parents will be able to set limits for time their children set in apps, and get detailed reports regarding which apps are used.

Apple chief executive Tim Cook meanwhile told developers the “app ecosystem” developed by the iPhone maker would soon have delivered more than $100 billion to partners.

“This is beyond remarkable,” he said, noting that the online App Store will be 10 years old in July. “The App Store has fundamenta­l changed the way we live.”

The array of features being added to software powering Apple devices included being able to make group FaceTime video calls; letting third-party applicatio­ns work on Apple Watch, expanding the abilities of Siri digital assistant and delivering a platform for augmented reality applicatio­ns.

Some analysts remain unimpresse­d, saying Apple is lagging rivals in key areas like artificial intelligen­ce as the smartphone market matures.

“I am concerned... that Apple is falling further behind Google and Amazon in AI (artificial intelligen­ce),” said GlobalData research director Avi Greengart in a tweet.

“If Apple has major improvemen­ts to Siri in its labs, it did not show them off today.”

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