Published , by Chris Jarrard
Published , by Chris Jarrard
With the newest major update to Apple’s mobile device operating system scheduled to officially arrive on end-users devices later this year, one of its highlight features has the potential to shake up advertising in the mobile space. The Ad Tracking Transparency features will require users to opt-in to tracking on a per-app basis. It is expected that a majority of iOS users will choose to withdraw their personal data from being shared across apps and other web services.
The extent of the changes to user tracking is outlined by Apple in a User Privacy and Data Use blog provided for app developers. The document explains how developers must present their customer-tracking information as well as best practices for handling said data. Apps will be prohibited from restricting functionality to users who chose to opt out of tracking and data collection.
Serving ads has become a backbone of the mobile software industry ever since Apple revolutionized mobile computing with the release of the first iPhone in 2007. Ad buyers were typically charged more to serve ads that were targeted to specific types of users. Which users should be targeted was determined by the vast amount of data that has been collected by applications and websites over the years.
As access to this customer data is expected to decrease with the changes in iOS 14.5, industry experts expect massive changes to the current ad monetization approaches in widespread use.
Apple blog MacRumors commented on what these changes mean going forward:
How this will ultimately affect the viability of certain app types and online advertising is yet to be seen. Like many other initiatives that Apple pushes with their iOS ecosystem, we expect other vendors will eventually follow suit in the coming years.