WWDC 2021: Apple just took its focus on privacy to a whole new level

Today is one of the biggest days of the year for Apple, with the iPhone maker streaming its annual developers conference, WWDC 2021, live from Apple Park headquarters in Cupertino, California, and packing the event with updates touching pretty much the entirety of its business — from iPhones to iPads, Apple TVs, Macs and more.

For the past few years this has mostly been a software-focused conference, with Monday’s highlight being Apple CEO Tim Cook’s keynote presentation. It preceded the usual rotation of Apple executives cycling through software updates for all the major products in Apple’s hardware lineup, and included in the rundown of individual software updates for the respective Apple products Apple also unveiled a slew of new privacy-focused updates that spans multiple devices across its portfolio.

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One of the big updates that immediately jumped out during the presentation includes the major new privacy protections in Mail and Safari, as well as an app privacy report that will let you know what data developers are trying to get from users. Users’ IP address will also not be visible when using Apple’s Safari browser.

The Mail app will now hide your IP address and location, and it also cracks down on the pesky pixels that are embedded in emails that are you used to track how you interact with those missives. And the app privacy report will also show exactly when an app has transmitted your data, and where. This report will give users a summary of how apps are using things like your location, microphone, and camera, and it will also show all the third-party domains that an app is communicating with.

Here’s what the pixel-related update we noted above refers to:

As we reported here, companies are using this email trick to spy on you. Email is increasingly a tempting, juicy target for marketers looking to optimize their chances of getting their messages in front of you and hoping to convert that into some action on your part, such as by you completing a purchase. There are many ways this is done, including clickable links you follow that might take you to a brand’s product page, with the link having included a way for the brand to see basic info about you — like what browser you’re using. Another way that might seem particularly creepy to some people involves a tracker embedded in some emails called a “spy pixel.”

What they are: Spy pixels, basically, are image files that are so small they’re invisible to the eye — yet inserted into the body of an email. Without the recipient even needing to take any action, the pixels in these emails let the sender see if an email was opened, and when it was opened. This is what Apple intends to start blocking.

In a note he sent to clients in the days leading up to WWDC 2021, Wedbush Securities analyst Daniel Ives wrote that Apple’s new App Tracking Transparency policy puts the iPhone maker “on a collision course with Facebook around the ability of users to block data tracking.” Continued Ives in his note: “We expect data privacy and security to be a main focus and theme of (Apple CEO Tim) Cook’s keynote as Apple solidifies its privacy policy with the iOS 15 unveil.”

Apple certainly delivered on that front during the privacy-focused portion of the opening-day WWDC presentation on Monday. Another big takeaway from this portion of Apple’s presentation: Hoo boy, advertisers are probably going to loathe these and other related updates.

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