In a statement shared with TechCrunch and The Information, the iPhone maker said it’s doing so “to give developers the time they need to make the necessary changes.” The exact date when the policy would be enforced is expected to be announced later. iOS 14, which is due in a couple of weeks, is all set to make device identifiers (called IDFA or “Identifier for Advertisers”) — a distinct, randomly generated code assigned to every iPhone and iPad — obsolete by requiring that third-party apps seek explicit consent from users before using the unique IDs for tracking their activities across other apps and websites. But the privacy-centric feature has drawn criticism from advertising companies who say the move would make it harder to deliver targeted ads to users. Last week, Facebook warned publishers that the change would make Audience Network, the social media platform’s ad service offered to third-party apps, ineffective and result in loss of advertising revenues. The company claimed that blocking ad personalization would cut Audience Network revenue by half or more, and that it would hurt more than 19,000 developers who work with Facebook, many of which are “small businesses that depend on ads to support their livelihood.” Tracking via the Apple device identifier allows Facebook and other third-party apps to tie an ad campaign to, say, an app download from an ad placed within their apps, thereby allowing advertisers to target users with contextually relevant ads. Although the IDFA can be manually reset — Firefox’s owner Mozilla notably launched a petition last year urging Apple to automatically reset this identifier on a monthly basis — the ability to opt out of in-app ad tracking and give users more control over third-party apps is doubtless a huge privacy upgrade.
Say hello to Apple’s privacy-preserving advertising tool
Apple’s decision to place ad-tracking behind an opt-in barrier is easily its most aggressive change yet, but it’s bad news for advertisers, who rely on IDFA to collect user data in order to deliver better ads and track whether users interact with the ads they encounter. In its place, Apple intends to switch to an alternative ad measurement system, called SKAdNetwork, that makes use of a privacy-safe advertising attribution to let advertisers know which ad campaigns worked without granting them access to granular data or giving away a user’s IDFA. At the same time, hampering the ability to serve personalized in-app ads to iPhone users has raised questions that the move would give preferential access to Apple, whose advertising tool will be switched on by default, thus potentially giving it a “platform-level advantage over competitors.” But the fact that Apple’s ad personalization will be enabled by default in iOS 14 is a red flag that could attract scrutiny over concerns that the move could further limit other players from operating on its platform unless they opt to give in to Apple’s rules. “Apple retains advantages that other ecosystem players cannot, simply because Apple owns the iOS platform,” said John Koetsier in Forbes last month. “Everyone else needs permission to allow ‘tracking,’ but Apple retains its access to more data.” There’s no doubting the privacy benefits of the change, but it also sidesteps Apple’s efforts to target users with its own advertising using data collecting from its users’ devices.