Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Apple delivers on iPhone privacy clampdown

- By Michael Liedtke

Apple is following through on its pledge to crack down Facebook and other snoopy apps that secretly shadow people on their iPhones to help sell more advertisin­g.

The new privacy feature, dubbed “App Tracking Transparen­cy,” rolled out Monday as part of an update to the operating system powering the iPhone and iPad. The anti-tracking shield included in iOS 14.5 arrives after a sevenmonth delay during which Apple and Facebook attacked each other’s business models and motives for decisions that affect billions of people around the world.

“What this feud demonstrat­es more than anything is that Facebook and Apple have tremendous gatekeepin­g powers over the market,” said Elizabeth Renieris, founding director of the Technology Ethics Lab at the University of Notre Dame.

But Apple says it is just looking out for the best interests of the more than 1 billion people currently using iPhones.

“Now is a good time to bring this out, both because of because of the increasing amount of data they have on their devices, and their sensitivit­y (about the privacy risks) is increasing, too,” said Erik Neuenschwa­nder, Apple’s chief privacy engineer.

Once the software update is installed — something most iPhone users do — even existing apps already on the device will be required to ask and receive consent to track online activities. That’s a shift Facebook fiercely resisted, most prominentl­y in a series of full-page newspaper ads blasting Apple.

Until now, Facebook and other apps have been able to automatica­lly conduct their surveillan­ce on iPhones unless users took the time and trouble to go into their settings to prevent it — a process that few people bother to navigate.

“This is an important step toward consumers getting the transparen­cy and the controls they have clearly been looking for,” said Daniel Barber, CEO of DataGrail, a firm that helps companies manage personal privacy.

In its attacks on Apple’s antitracki­ng controls, Facebook blasted the move as an abuse of power designed to force more apps to charge for their services instead of relying on ads. Apple takes a 15% to 30% cut on most payments processed through an iPhone app.

Online tracking has long helped Facebook and thousands of other apps accumulate informatio­n about their user’s interests and habits so they can show customized ads. Although Facebook executives initially acknowledg­ed Apple’s changes would probably reduce its revenue by billions of dollars annually, the social networking company has framed most of its public criticism as a defense of small businesses that rely on online ads to stay alive.

Apple, in turn, has pilloried Facebook and other apps for prying so deeply into people’s lives that it has created a societal crisis.

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