Arab Press

بالشعب و للشعب
Saturday, Apr 20, 2024

Apple to start enforcing privacy notifications that upset Facebook

Apple to start enforcing privacy notifications that upset Facebook

Facebook has accused Apple not of giving users' more choice, but of skewing the market to its own advantage.

Apple said it will introduce over the coming weeks a new privacy notification that will enable users to prevent companies such as Facebook from tracking their activity on other apps and websites.

The update will be included in iOS 14.5 making it mandatory for iPhone apps to gain the device owner's permission before collecting this additional data.

The move has provoked enormous criticism from Facebook which slammed Apple for what it described as "a discouraging prompt" that would allow users to choose whether the company could collect their data or not.

Apple will display a prompt giving users a choice over app tracking


Apple's App Tracking Transparency (ATT) feature is being released just as the iPhone-maker and Facebook are on course for a series of clashes.

A number of looming court cases and technological developments are pitting the two companies' business models against each other, and the technology industry will be reshaped in the winner's image.

Facebook has claimed the ATT feature would harm app developers and small businesses, and that it was an anti-competitive measure designed to benefit Apple's own advertising features.

Apple responded by saying it welcomed in-app advertising and was not prohibiting tracking, "simply requiring each app to obtain explicit user consent in order to track so that it will be more transparent and under user control".

Earlier this year the company's chief executive Tim Cook delivered a scathing attack on Facebook, albeit without mentioning the company by name.

Mr Cook suggesting the company's data collection practices had fuelled the mob attack at the Capitol building in Washington DC.

Speaking virtually at a conference in Brussels, Mr Cook said: "We can no longer turn a blind eye to a theory of technology that says all engagement is good engagement.

"At a moment of rampant disinformation and conspiracy theories juiced by algorithms... it's long past time to stop pretending that this approach doesn't come with a cost - of polarisation, of lost trust and, yes, of violence."

Part of the issue, said Mr Cook, was that smartphone apps contain too many trackers which "surveil and identify users across apps, watching and recording their behaviour" often without users knowing that this is taking place.

"Technology does not need vast troves of personal data, stitched together across dozens of websites and apps, in order to succeed. Advertising existed and thrived for decades without it. We're here today because the path of least resistance is rarely the path of wisdom," he added.

"If a business is built on misleading users, on data exploitation, on choices that are no choices at all, then it does not deserve our praise. It deserves reform.

"Will the future belong to the innovations that make our lives better, more fulfilled and more human?

"Or will it belong to those tools that prize our attention to the exclusion of everything else, compounding our fears and aggregating extremism, to serve ever-more-invasively-targeted ads over all other ambitions?"

Apple is introducing new app tracking protections


Facebook's criticisms came as the social media company also announced it would be joining Fortnite maker Epic Games' legal fight against Apple. It said it would be providing relevant information on how Apple's policies adversely impacted the company.

"Free apps and the entrepreneurs and creators who build them... rely on advertising to make money, and in turn, provide free content to people - from your morning news to the game you play in line at the coffee shop to that comedy show you watched on Friday night," explained Facebook.

"Apple has every incentive to use their dominant platform position to interfere with how our apps and other apps work, which they regularly do," Mr Zuckerberg told investors. "They say they are doing this to help people, but the moves clearly track their competitive interests."

Newsletter

Related Articles

Arab Press
0:00
0:00
Close
China Criticizes US for Vetoing UN Ceasefire Resolution in Gaza
Saudi Arabia ranks first in UN index for e-government services in MENA
Israel Records 20% Drop In GDP, War In Gaza Is The Reason
Saudi Arabia's FDI Inflows Grow with New International Standards
Venture Capitals Power Up Across MENA Region
PM Modi Announces Opening Of New CBSE Office In Dubai
January Funding for MENA Startups Totals $86.5 Million
Saudi Arabia accelerates digital economy growth through Nvidia partnership
Israel unveils tunnels underneath Gaza City headquarters of UN agency for Palestinian refugees
Israel deploys new military AI in Gaza war
Egypt threatens to suspend key peace treaty if Israel pushes into Gaza border town, officials say
Saudi Arabia Warns Of A "Humanitarian Catastrophe" If Israel Moves On Rafah
US University To Shut Qatar Campus Due To "Heightened Mideast Instability"
Facebook and Instagram Ban Iran's Supreme Leader
Defense Technology Showcase Held in Riyadh
Saudi Arabia’s non-oil exports rise 2.5% to $6bn in November 2023: GASTAT
Rolls-Royce Executive Encourages Saudi Women to Tap into Their Inner 'Superhero' for Success in Defense Industry
Saudi Arabia launches National Academy of Vehicles and Cars
Saudi Tourism Minister Reveals Plan for 250,000 New Hotel Rooms by 2030
SAR to more than double eastern network passenger capacity with new trains deal
Saudi Arabia Enhances National Defense with New Partnerships
Saudi Aramco Maintains Arab Light Crude Pricing to Asia for March
NEOM Establishes New York Office to Support Investors
Saudi Wealth Fund Draws in Over $25 Billion Worth of Investments in Three Years, Al-Rumayyan Reveals
The Saudi Kingdom's Ultimatum to Israel: A Win-Win Peace with Saudi Arabia and the Arab World, or a Lose-Lose Continued Occupation and Endless Conflict
Biden condemns anti-Arab hate after WSJ opinion piece calls Dearborn ‘jihad capital’
Turkey Releases Seven Hostages Captured by Pro-Gaza Gunman
Arab Parliament Commends Women's Contributions to Societal Development
British and Hungarian Foreign Ministers visited Lebanese leaders to stress the importance of enacting UN Resolution 1701
Yemen's Houthis Say They Targeted British Merchant Vessel In Red Sea
Donald Trump Nominated for Nobel Peace Prize for 'Historic' Middle East Policy
US lawmakers approve F-16 jet sale to Turkey following NATO expansion support
Saudi Arabia Climbs 25 Places in World Bank's National Statistics Indicator
Tourism Growth in Saudi Arabia Fuels Advancements in the Hospitality Industry," Says Rotana Official
Houthi Rebels Request Departure of UN Staff from Yemen, Including US and UK Personnel, within a Month
Modi Inaugurates Hindu Temple on Site of Demolished Mosque in India
Over 25,000 Deaths in Gaza Amid Israeli Offensive
Escalating Clashes in Gaza as Israel Distributes Leaflets to Assist in Locating Hostages
Turkey's First Astronaut Set to Launch for International Space Station Today
Head of Palestinian Investment Fund Warns More People May Die of Hunger Than War in Gaza
Palestinian Envoy Criticizes UK for Alleged 'Double Standards' in Policies Toward Israel
Morocco to Lead UN Human Rights Council in 2024
Is artificial intelligence the solution to cyber security threats?
Egypt has been identified as the leading military force among Arab nations and ranks 15th globally
The AI Revolution in the Workforce: CEOs at Davos Predict Major Job Cuts in 2024
Iranian Nobel Laureate Narges Mohammadi Receives Additional Prison Sentence
"Gazans Urge Israeli Forces to Target Hamas in Leaked Audio"
Biden States US and UK Airstrikes on Houthis Were a 'Defensive Action
Large Pro-Palestine Rally in London as Gaza Conflict Hits Day 100
South Africa Urges World Court to Halt Israeli Actions in Gaza
×