Home — Gadgets To Be Tracked or Not? Apple Is Now Giving Us the Choice.

To Be Tracked or Not? Apple Is Now Giving Us the Choice.

by Mary Sewell

If we had a choice, would any of us want to be tracked online to see more relevant digital ads? We are about to find out. On Monday, Apple released iOS 14.5, one of its most anticipated software updates for iPhones and iPads in years. It includes a new privacy tool, App Tracking Transparency, which could give us more control over how our data is shared. Here’s how it works: When an app wants to follow our activities to share information with third parties such as advertisers, a window will appear on our Apple device to ask for our permission. The app must stop monitoring and sharing our data if we say no.

A pop-up window may sound like a minor design tweak, but it has thrown the online advertising industry upheaval. Most notably, Facebook has gone on the warpath. Last year, the social network created a website and took out full-page newspaper ads denouncing Apple’s privacy feature as harmful to small businesses.

A big motivator, of course, was that the privacy setting could hurt Facebook’s business. If we choose not to let Facebook track us, it will be harder for the company to see what we are shopping for or doing inside other apps, making it more difficult for brands to target us with ads. (Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook’s chief executive, has disputed that Apple’s policy will hurt his company’s business.) “This is a huge step in the right direction, if only because it’s making Facebook sweat,” said Gennie Gebhart, a director at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a digital rights nonprofit.

Apple

But, she added, “one big question is: Will it work?”

Ms. Gebhart and other privacy experts said Apple’s new feature might not be enough to end shady tracking on iPhones. It could simply push developers and ad technology firms to find loopholes so they can continue tracking people in different ways, she and others said. For about two months, I tested early iOS 14.5 to acclimate to the new privacy control and other new features. Only a few developers have pushed the pop-up windowtoh the public, so my findings of how well the privacy feature works have been limited. But I found that iOS 14.5 also has other significant new features. By default, one can use Siri to work with a music player other than Apple Music, such as Spotify. That’s a big deal: The voice assistant wasn’t convenient to use with other music services in the past.

Here’s what you need to know about Apple’s new software.

Don’t Track Me (Please)

It’s essential to understand how tracking works inside apps.

Let’s say you use a shopping app to browse for a blender. You look at a blender from Brand X, then close the app. Later, ads for that blender start showing up in other mobile apps, like Facebook and Instagram. Here’s what happened: The shopping app hired an ad-tech company that embedded trackers inside the app. Those trackers looked at information on your device to pinpoint you. When you open other apps working with the same ad-tech firm, those apps wcouldidentify you and serve you ads for Brand X’s blender.

Let Us Help You Protect Your Digital Life

Apple’s new privacy feature is intended to let you decide whether you want that to happen. Now, when you open some apps, you will be greeted with a pop-up window: “Allow [App Name] to track your activity across other companies’ apps and websites?” You can choose “Ask App Not to Track” or “Allow.”

When we select “Ask App Not to Track,” two things happen. The first is that Apple disables the app from using an Apple device identifier, a random string of letters and numbers assigned to our iPhones, and is used to track our activities across apps and websites. The second is that we communicate to the app developer that  we don’t want our information to be tracked and shared with anyone in any way.

That seems easy enough. But No. 2 is where things also get slightly complicated.

Ad-tech companies have many ways to follow us beyond Apple’s device identifier. For example, advertisers can use a method called fingerprinting. This involves looking at seemingly innocuous characteristics of your device — like the screen resolution, operating system version, and model — and combining them to determine your identity and track you across different apps. It’s difficult for Apple to block all tracking and fingerprinting happening on iPhones, privacy researchers said. That would require knowing about or predicting every new tracking method an ad-tech firm uses.

“From a technical standpoint, there isn’t a whole lot that you can do” to stop such tracking, said Mike Audi, the founder of Tiki, an app that can help you see what other apps are doing with your data. Yet, the privacy change is still significant because it explicitly asks us for consent. If we tell apps that we don’t want to be tracked and keep doing so, Apple can bar the offenders from its App Store. The pop-up window also makes the privacy control far easier for people to discover, said Stephanie Nguyen, a research scientist who has studied user experience design and data privacy.

IPhone owners could restrict advertisers from tracking them in the past, but the tools were buried in settings where most people wouldn’t look. “The option was available before, but was it?” Ms. Nguyen said. “That’s a big shift — making it visible.” This week, all apps with tracking behavior must include the App Tracking Transparency pop-up in their following software updates. That means we initially will probably see a small number of apps requesting permission to track us, with the number growing over time as more apps are updated.

You may also like

Leave a Comment