Apple Accused of 'Hypocrisy' by Ad Industry Coalition Over Its Anti-Tracking Policy

Apple has been accused of "hypocrisy" and "cynicism" over its iPhone anti-tracking policy by an ad industry trade group that includes Meta and Google as members.

appleprivacyad cleaned
The Interactive Advertising Bureau (IAB) is an organization that develops standards to be used across the industry to control and regulate online advertising. It has Google, Meta, Adobe, and many other companies as members. This week, IAB CEO David Cohen had a few things to say about Apple's approach to ‌iPhone‌ policy and privacy.

Speaking at IAB's annual leadership meeting (via Ad Age), Cohen accused Apple of "attacking" the ad industry from the inside, saying Apple represents "cynicism and hypocrisy." Cohen said "while there are no shortage of extremists attacking our industry from the outside, there are some attacking it from the inside out. Most notably, Apple exemplifies the cynicism and hypocrisy that underpins the prevailing extremist view."

Cohen explains that while Apple requires apps to ask users for permission before tracking them across apps and websites owned by other companies, the company can track its own users without accountability. Cohen refers to a feature called App Tracking Transparency (ATT), launched in April 2021, that forces apps to ask users for explicit consent before tracking them. "It can't be that 'personalization' in the Apple ecosystem equals 'tracking' outside of it," Cohen said. "That's not really a fair fight."

generic tracking prompt blue

App Tracking Transparency pop-up required for apps

Apple requires third-party apps to ask users for permission before tracking them, but the company's stock apps do not since they don't track users, according to Apple's senior vice president of software engineering Craig Federighi. In an interview with the Wall Street Journal in April 2021 about ATT, Federighi explained that no Apple app would have the ATT pop-up since "there's no Apple app or service that tracks users." Federighi added that if Apple launched an app or service that tracked users, it would comply with its own App Store policy.

Apple is currently facing a class action lawsuit that alleges it records users' mobile activity without their consent, despite Apple's privacy assurances. The lawsuit accuses Apple of providing "utterly false" assurances that ‌iPhone‌ users are in control of their data. "Apple records, tracks, collects and monetizes analytics data — including browsing history and activity information — regardless of what safeguards or 'privacy settings' consumers undertake to protect their privacy," the lawsuit reads.

Apple's ‌App Store‌ policy and approach to privacy have been an increasingly more prominent concern for international organizations and companies, from the EU to Meta, Google, and Spotify. This week, Spotify and others penned a letter to the EU calling Apple's policy "anti-competitive" and "harmful" for companies.

Tag: Privacy

Popular Stories

iOS 18

Here Are Apple's Full iOS 18.5 Release Notes

Tuesday May 6, 2025 2:17 pm PDT by
Apple today seeded the release candidate version of iOS 18.5 to developers and public beta testers, giving us a look at the final version of the update that will be provided to the public next week. With the release candidate, Apple provided release notes, so we have a more complete look at the new features that are included in the update, including those that weren't found during the beta...
siri glow

iPhone Users Now Able to Submit Claims in $95 Million Siri Spying Lawsuit

Wednesday May 7, 2025 11:40 am PDT by
If you owned a Siri-compatible device and had an accidental Siri activation between September 17, 2014 and December 31, 2024, you could be eligible for a payment from Apple as part of a class action lawsuit settlement. Apple in January agreed to pay $95 million to settle a class action lawsuit involving Siri spying accusations, and a website to distribute the funds has now been set up and...
Nineth iOS 19 Feature

iOS 19 Beta is a Month Away With These New Features for Your iPhone

Thursday May 8, 2025 7:37 am PDT by
The first iOS 19 beta is just one month away, and there are already many new features and changes that are expected with it. Apple should seed the first iOS 19 beta to developers immediately following the WWDC 2025 keynote, which is scheduled for Monday, June 9. Following beta testing, the update should be released to the general public in September. Below, we recap the key iOS 19 rumors...
Foldable iPhone 2023 Feature Homescreen

Apple's Foldable iPhone Display Tech May Set New Industry Standard

Thursday May 8, 2025 3:29 am PDT by
Apple's upcoming foldable iPhone will feature a new type of display panel developed by Samsung that has never been used in a foldable product, claims a source with links to Apple's supply chain. According to the account yeux1122 on the Korean Naver blog, the foldable iPhone will use a custom display process for which Apple will hold branding trademark rights, and that meets Apple's stringent ...
iPhone 17 Pro Blue Feature Tighter Crop

iPhone 17: What's New With the Cameras

Friday May 2, 2025 3:52 pm PDT by
We've still got months to go before the new iPhone 17 models come out, but a combination of dummy models and leaks have given us some insight into what we can expect in terms of camera changes. Apple is adding new camera features, and changing the design of the camera bump for some models. You might be skeptical of dummy models, but over the years, they've proven to be a highly accurate...
Mayday Calendar

Apple Acquisition Hints at Upgraded Calendar App on iOS 19 or Beyond

Friday May 9, 2025 9:13 am PDT by
Apple acquired Canadian startup Mayday Labs in April 2024, according to a European Commission listing, spotted by French blog MacGeneration. The acquisition had not received widespread attention from tech publications until now. Apple is legally required to report certain acquisitions to the European Commission, under the terms of the EU's Digital Markets Act. Mayday Labs founder Jeremy...
maxresdefault

Video Review: Two Months With the M4 MacBook Air

Wednesday May 7, 2025 12:42 pm PDT by
It's been nearly two months since the M4 MacBook Air launched, so we thought we'd take another look at the machine now that it's been out long enough to do some serious testing with it. Subscribe to the MacRumors YouTube channel for more videos. Introduced in March, the MacBook Air is equipped with Apple's latest and greatest M4 chip, so it's more than capable of handling day-to-day tasks...

Top Rated Comments

fatTribble Avatar
30 months ago
If it’s between Apple and Google/Facebook, my trust will go to Apple every time.
Score: 57 Votes (Like | Disagree)
I7guy Avatar
30 months ago

You think Apple got to 2 trillion dollars worth by being fair and moral?

LOL
You can't force people to buy your product. I think Apple got to $2T by producing a product people want to buy.
Score: 43 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Ctrlos Avatar
30 months ago
The ad industry needs to go back to its older practices of market research rather than data scraping. Roadside and Magazine adverts are positioned just so because of the chance they might catch the eye of a focus group of individuals (eg a luxury metal watch in a mens magazine or a fast food advert 2 miles from its location). Products sold just well enough without the huge invasion of privacy that comes with data scraping and theft.

Its not actually that difficult to load adverts based on keywords rather than web history. If I'm looking at a videogames news portal then an advert for a controller is going to be aimed in the right direction just as is a cough medicine loaded up when a user searches for 'coughs in children'. Cookies don't work because they work after the fact. If I spent an hour looking at lawnmowers on Lawnmowers.com then seeing an advert for Lawnmowers.com over the next few days isn't selling me anything I didn't already see.

And please, for the love of everything good ditch and burn video adverts on text pages. Nobody likes them and they just get in the way. If someone jammed a YouTube video in my face every time I turned the page in a newspaper on the train then they'd get a broken nose.

Commercials during YouTube videos are not annoying because the same commercials are on TV. Find a more organic way to integrate your ads into text; you've been doing it for centuries in news print so it shouldn't be too hard.
Score: 33 Votes (Like | Disagree)
dmiannay Avatar
30 months ago
"They are the same. Of you investigate, Apple is using your data illegaly too."

@Kulfon: You sound certain about this. Can you please provide the receipts showing actual evidence, not accusations or lawsuits? You may be right, but I'd like to see actual evidence before believing it is happening. Thanks.
Score: 31 Votes (Like | Disagree)
evertjr Avatar
30 months ago
If google and meta are upset then I'm happy and Apple is right.
Score: 20 Votes (Like | Disagree)
d686546s Avatar
30 months ago
I hate the modern advertising industry with all of my heart. I do not want to be tracked, analysed, personalised etc etc etc without my consent. I don't want to be monetised all of the time. I'm happy to pay for good services.

I don't for one second believe they are not self-serving here, but that doesn't mean that they may not be right. I have no idea, frankly, but I equally wouldn't dismiss it. It's not like Apple hasn't been trying to monetise everything and anything under the sun lately.
Score: 19 Votes (Like | Disagree)