Skip to main content

Apple to devs: stop tracking iOS users by device numbers

ios_5
Image used with permission by copyright holder

In an apparent acknowledgment of issues surrounding privacy and tracking of mobile users, Apple is telling iOS developers that, as of iOS 5, they should no longer be using a device’s unique identification number to keep track of users. Instead, Apple recommends developers implement their own unique identifier technology, and use that instead. By deprecating access to unique device identification numbers (UDIDs), Apple is telling developers that, eventually, they will no longer have access to that information.

Apple’s iOS 5 documentation is currently only available to registered developers.

Recommended Videos

Asking application developers to use their own unique identifiers to keep track of mobile users isn’t particularly burdensome: almost any app, game, or service that enables users to customize setting and behaviors—or that provides access to accounts, content, or other paid items—is going to use unique identifiers, whether they be account numbers, serial numbers, or a mixture of tokens. Most of these are “in-house” identifiers: they don’t mean anything to other businesses or apps, and may even conflict with them.

However, services that try to track users across a broad range of applications and services have often been using iOS devices UDIDs as unique identifiers precisely because they’re guaranteed to be unique in the iOS universe, regardless of what apps or what version of iOS someone might be running. The most common example of a service that needs to identify users across a broad range of applications are advertising networks. Ad networks historically use a single identifier to track a users’s activities across a number of different sites and applications—on iOS, that has almost always been a devices UDID. In a 2010 study (PDF), security researcher Eric Smith found some 68 percent of iPhone apps transmitted UDIDs to remote servers every time they were launched; sometimes those servers belonged to the app’s developer, sometimes to ad networks, sometimes to both.

Apple’s move to deprecate the use of UDID’s may be as much about self-preservation as consumer privacy: the company is facing a series of lawsuits alleging that enabling apps (and developers) to access a device’s UDID is a violation of consumer privacy; at least one suit over disclosure of UDIDs is a class action case.

Apple says it expects to ship iOS 5 this fall. There’s no information on when Apple might enforce a ban on collecting UUIDs, but it likely won’t happen with the initial release of iOS 5—too many existing apps would break.

Topics
Geoff Duncan
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Geoff Duncan writes, programs, edits, plays music, and delights in making software misbehave. He's probably the only member…
Apple iPhone 16 Plus vs. iPhone 14 Plus: Is it upgrade time?
Composite shot of iPhone 16 Plus and iPhone 14 Plus.

It’s an exciting year for Apple’s iPhone 16 lineup, and that’s not merely because of the upcoming Apple Intelligence features. After two years of enduring relatively uninspired updates, fans of Apple’s standard iPhone and iPhone Plus models finally have a pair of iPhones that feel like more than “also-rans” compared to Apple’s flagship iPhone Pro lineup.

While the standard iPhone 16 models may not have gotten all the upgrades we hoped for, Apple is no longer arbitrarily reserving its best chips and user interface features for its flagship Pro series. In addition to the Dynamic Island and Action button, the iPhone 16 Plus gets the same Camera Control feature that Apple introduced in the iPhone 16 Pro, a powerful new A-series chip, and some unique design changes that are entirely its own.

Read more
Apple uses giggles to highlight new Apple Intelligence features
A screenshot from an Apple ad for Apple Intelligence.

On the same day that Apple started rolling out Apple Intelligence to iPhone 16 handsets as well as iPhone 15 Pro devices, the tech giant dropped two videos showcasing some of the new features.

The first one (below) highlights the new Apple Intelligence Writing Tools feature, which, in Apple’s own words, is designed to “help your words sound more professional, friendly, or more concise.”

Read more
iOS 18.2: How to use ChatGPT with Siri
Siri offloading user query to ChatGPT.

Ever since Apple announced the AI stack known as Apple Intelligence earlier this year, one of the most highly anticipated features has been the ChatGPT-Siri camaraderie. In a nutshell, the queries presented to Siri will be offloaded to ChatGPT if it can't provide a satisfactory answer.

Read more