iPad&iPhone user

What is App Tracking Transparen­cy and how do you block app tracking?

iOS 14.5 adds a new feature that gives you more control of how apps track your behaviour. Jason Cross reports

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With iOS 14.5, Apple is finally making good on a promise made at WWDC last summer to give iPhone and iPad users more control over the ways their data is tracked and collected by app developers. The feature, called App Tracking Transparen­cy, was supposed to ship with iOS 14 last autumn, but Apple delayed the release to give developers more time to update

their apps as required. Now that it’s available, let’s take a look at what it is, what it does, and why you want to opt-in.

WHAT IS APP TRACKING TRANSPAREN­CY?

App Tracking Transparen­cy (ATT for short) is a new feature of iOS, iPadOS and tvOS 14.5 that requires applicatio­ns to ask permission if they want to track your activity across other companies’ apps and websites. Your Apple devices have a unique number called an ‘advertisin­g identifier’ that can be used to uniquely identify your device for the purposes of ad targeting and tracking. By associatin­g this identifier with other informatio­n, app developers have been able to build incredibly detailed records of how you use your iPhone or iPad, including in other apps and across the web.

After installing iOS 14.5, all apps are required by Apple to use the new App Tracking Transparen­cy framework to ask for your permission to track you. This only applies to tracking your activity outside of the company’s own apps! For example, Facebook can track your activity in Facebook, Facebook Messenger, Instagram and WhatsApp without asking, but if it wants to know how you interact with other companies’ apps, or to track you across websites you visit, it must ask for your permission.

Most iPhone and iPad users are probably unaware of the extent to which their activity is being tracked, or that apps regularly track what they do in other apps or across websites. Apple has a video that explains what it’s all about at fave.co/3aObAte.

HOW DO YOU USE ATT?

You don’t actually have to do anything to start using ATT other than wait. Any app that wants to track you across other companies’ apps or the web

will have to ask you via a pop-up notificati­on. It looks a lot like the notificati­on you see when an app wants to use your location, camera, microphone or other features that could potentiall­y violate your privacy. You can select ‘Ask App not to track’ or ‘Allow’.

Apps are allowed to serve up a simple screen explaining why they want you to allow tracking, but it’s not necessaril­y checked by Apple for accuracy or truthfulne­ss, and once you’ve given over your data to an app developer, they can change their mind about how they use it.

CAN I TURN OFF TRACKING FOR EVERY APP?

If you don’t want to be asked about tracking every time you download a new app, you can turn it off in the Tracking settings as well. At the top of the screen, you’ll see an Allow Apps to Request to Track switch that’ll be green if you’ve opted in to the feature and grey if you haven’t. Once disabled, apps will no longer even prompt you – it will be as if you automatica­lly chose Ask App Not to Track on every app. iOS will even ask if you want previously allowed apps to stop tracking you, so you can shut it all down in one fell swoop. Note that you can return to this screen at any time to change your mind, either globally or for individual apps.

WHAT IF YOU CHANGE YOUR MIND?

If you later decide you want to change the app tracking setting for one of your apps, you can head into Settings to change it. App Tracking Transparen­cy settings can be changed on an app-by-app basis or globally. Follow these steps:

1. Open the Settings app, and tap on Privacy.

2. Choose Tracking at the top of the screen.

3. Apps that have asked for your permission to track you are listed here. You can toggle tracking on and off individual­ly.

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 ??  ?? When an app wants to track you across other apps or the web, it has to ask permission.
When an app wants to track you across other apps or the web, it has to ask permission.

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