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Security Bite: Tired of app tracking pop-ups? Here’s how to auto-deny them

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Why This Matters

This article highlights how iPhone users can automate the denial of app tracking prompts, enhancing privacy and reducing annoyance. It underscores the ongoing importance of user control over personal data in the face of evolving digital advertising practices. For consumers and the tech industry, this feature represents a step toward more privacy-centric mobile experiences.

Key Takeaways

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As Steve Jobs once said “Who wants a pop-up?[…] yuck.” Or was he referring to an iPhone stylist? Either way, if your an avid downloader of apps you probably get annoyed by the amount of app tracking prompts that appear. You know, the one asking whether you’ll let the app “track your activity across other companies’ apps and websites.” You tap “Ask App Not to Track” and move on, but minutes later another app shows you the same thing.

You’ll be glad to know there’s a way for iPhone to automatically default to “no” and never see these prompts again…

You are the product

Behind the scenes, this is Apple’s App Tracking Transparency (ATT) framework at work. Introduced way back in iOS 14.5, when an app wants to access your device’s advertising identifier (IDFA) to follow you across other apps and websites, it has to ask first. This was a huge blow for Facebook and Instagram at the time, which even encouraged users to enable tracking so The company lost an estimated $12.8 billion in just 2022 alone from iOS 14.5’s ATT implementation.

More importantly, it was a huge win for users privacy at the time. Before, apps had free range to collect your age, gender, location, usage patterns, purchases, browsing habits, which ads you clicked, and more. This is data gold to brokers looking to build a profile on you for targeted ads.

Today, device fingerprinting is the most widely used method and collects details like your screen size, OS version, time zone, and probably more. Apps have also switched to contextual advertising, tracking what you do inside their app rather than across apps.

Overall, both are less desirable than obtaining a user’s IDFA, which still sell to ad networks for big bucks. Protect your anonymity.

Fix to automatically default to “no”

It’s important to note that toggling this setting off doesn’t just hide the prompt. It will tell the operating system to deny the request on your behalf, automatically.

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