The Mercury News

Apple will force apps to ask for OK before tracking users

Update will provide more transparen­cy

- By Gerrit De Vynck

Apple will force iPhone apps to get permission from users before tracking them, dealing a potentiall­y major blow to app developers who rely on advertisem­ents to make money.

The change, announced at Apple’s virtual developer conference on Monday, is similar to a move the company made last year when it started sending notificati­ons to users each time an app tried using their location.

Apple facilitate­s tracking on its phones by providing app developers with unique numbers for each user, something security advocates have long said contradict­s the company’s frequent statements in support of privacy. The update to the iPhone’s operating system doesn’t do away with the tracking system, but makes it much more apparent to users and gives them more opportunit­ies to turn it off. Previously, controls were buried in the phone’s settings menu.

“Considerin­g the iPhone’s user base, this is a very big change. It certainly improves user privacy,” said Lukasz Olejnik, an independen­t privacy researcher and consultant. “Users at large encounteri­ng such pop-ups in just about any applicatio­n may potentiall­y start asking questions about the use of their data. It will force the industry to reconsider some of the core assumption­s.”

In-app advertisin­g generates billions of dollars every year. Tracking data built into apps also are used by ad tech companies to link phone users to their other devices, allowing ads to be shown to the same people on multiple screens, as well as to measure the effectiven­ess of those messages.

Apple has heralded itself as a champion of user privacy, especially compared with other tech giants that rely on advertisin­g, Facebook and Alphabet’s Google. Apple started limiting tracking on its Safari web browser in 2017. Earlier this year, Google said it would do the same for its Chrome browser after a twoyear consultati­on with the advertisin­g industry.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVES ?? Apple’s move to ask users’ permission to allow tracking on apps is similar to its policy notifying users each time an app tries using their locations.
ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVES Apple’s move to ask users’ permission to allow tracking on apps is similar to its policy notifying users each time an app tries using their locations.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States