Apple, Google 'Kill' Advertising Cookies In Major Privacy Overhaul
Apple, Google 'Kill' Advertising Cookies In Major Privacy Overhaul
BY TYLER DURDEN TUESDAY, APR 27, 2021 - 03:10 PM
Google and Apple are each making major changes to the way
advertisers can track and target consumers, which will effectively kill the
decades-old 'cookies' used to tailor ads based on websites you've visited.
Apple's
plan, unveiled Monday, has made privacy advocates happy but has
ad-tech firms, mobile app developers and rivals (primarily Facebook, which
could lose up to 3% of revenue according to Bank of America) fuming, Bloomberg reports.
Starting Monday, Apple's iOS will require apps running on its devices to obtain user permission before tracking any activity across other apps and websites - a move similar to what they've already done with their Safari web browser.
Ever use
an app and see a screen pop up asking to use your phone’s microphone or camera?
Apple’s change will work like that. Apps
that want to track for advertising on iPhones and iPads will have to prompt users to opt in.
Apple calls this App Tracking Transparency, or ATT. And
it bans app makers from gunning for potential installers or lapsed users with
data from other apps, such as purchase history and app-usage patterns. For many
months, Apple has signaled this was coming, but still many app businesses are
terrified of the financial damage. -Bloomberg
We're guessing most people won't opt into being tracked, making
it far more difficult for ad campaigns to target consumers. One game developer,
according to the report, called Apple's new rule an "atomic
bomb."
According to Apple's software chief, Craig Federighi, the
company thinks that "the industry will adapt" and that consumers
should decide how their data are used.
Google's
plan, which has yet to be enacted, is to invent an alternative to cookies
that will place consumers in 'buckets' as opposed to using
an individual's web history.
At some
point (Google hasn’t said exactly when), the company’s Chrome browser will nix
third-party cookies that target ads based on individual behavior. Google calls its proposed replacement Federal
Learning of Cohorts (FLoC), a mouthful for new computer
science jujitsu that will lump web surfers together around particular
interests. Visit
Bloomberg.com, for instance, and you may be categorized as a financial news
consumer along with thousands of other people. Go
to People.com, you may be put in a cohort of celebrity gossip fans.
Advertisers can market to the groups you are in, but your identity (and web
habits) will be hidden “in the crowd,” according to Google, which calls this a
“privacy-first” system. -Bloomberg
While Apple's plan was applauded by privacy groups such as the
Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) - calling it "one more step in the
right direction," Google's plan has received
backlash - with the EFF begging them not to move forward
with it.
"The technology will avoid the privacy risks of third-party
cookies, but it will create new ones in the process," said the
organization. Meanwhile, smaller rival web browsers such as Firefox and Opera
are rejecting FLoC as a poor solution for privacy. Microsoft has been lukewarm
on the idea for its Edge browser.
Ad-tech companies, unsurprisingly, are also not happy - and
claim that FLoC further increases Google's power over an online advertising
industry they already dominate.
https://www.zerohedge.com/technology/apple-google-kill-advertising-cookies-major-privacy-overhauls
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