> On the App Store, display ads are currently shown in the search tab in the Suggested panel. Apple will also soon expand ads to the main Today tab and within third-party app download pages.
Ads are coming to iOS (heck, my iPad and Mac already have quite a bit peppered around) and Apple will earn even more money in the future from them.
It feels like everything is so user hostile nowadays, even the Google keyboard nag you to give them a Play Store star-rating and review. Or they interrupt you with a spammy notification that asks you to tell your friends about them... (Insert more curse words here).
Maybe I should start a SaaS that will offer IoT device manufacturers a way to spam their owners to rate them on the appropriate store. You touch the fridge door, it doesn't budge, and the screen lights up: "Before you get your milk, do you like your fridge? Please rate us 5 stars on the Walmart store!"
I have an ethical line and it is my phone and computer are for my convenience, not a way to toss advertising toward me.
Go ahead Apple, test me. Ya almost lost me a year ago. And I am not alone in this, I think most of Apple’s user base would be quite intolerant of such a plan.
Home automation topic goes for decades. However I don’t see wide adoption anywhere. Most tech savvy buddy is playing often with new products and stated, that the best thing is Philips Hue lights in home automation area. Other things barely work.
(Look at how people talk about Google today vs 10 years ago, too, for instance.)
I am not surprised when I hear 'normies' complain about this, because they mostly run OEM Windows Home which the vendors of their devices decided is OK, but on a forum such as this one, I am surprised to hear these kind of complaints.
* Everything is configurable from the Privacy Settings with an on / off toggle
* Whenever a new invasive option gets pushed with an update, there's an update screen which allows you to disable it and is disabled by default, so by skipping, you don't enable it
At least this is how I perceive my machine.
There are ads in the play store (labelled), ads in the Google news feed (labelled), ads in Gmail (labelled and similar to the ads in the web version).
But no ads in what I would consider the daily experience (home screen, lock screen, apps menu, settings).
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b_IaVMsCbf8
They didn't post one in Ops.
Luckily, the fiasco with Little Snitch was resolved, and I can enjoy a mac for occasional design work, but Figma is running well in the Browser and if I see any attempt to push me into Ad Hell, it is totally over.
Vertical integration is important for Apple, but as an old Apple user, this will be "no-fly zone" for me.
Actually, CSAM had a positive in my life. Since then, I am using my smartphone less and with basic apps, some banking, calls and chatting.
You open the door, and immediately a banner slowly slides up asking if you'll accept a virtual cookie. Obviously you want that cookie, so you agree. The banner slowly descends back into its slot.
Now you identify the location of the milk and begin reaching for it.
Suddenly a banner unfurls from above, blocking your reach suggesting, "Subscribe to the Samsmug Smartfridge Newsletter!" Somewhere on the edge of the inside of the fridge is a button to make the newsletter banner retract. You find it and press it, and the banner retracts.
Now you reach for the milk... But! The shelves suddenly move up and down to make room for a flip-out screen which starts playing a video ad of the new weekly butter delivery service. Somewhere else on the edge of the interior of the fridge is a button to hide the screen, but fortunately you can still see the top of the milk container down near the bottom of the accessible opening.
So you squeeze the jug out the narrow space, turn around, and slam the door as you turn. D'oh!
Now you debate just drinking as much of the milk as you can and then throwing the rest out rather than go through the whole process again just to return the milk to its place.
Good for you for buying Windows Pro, what about everybody and their grandma else stuck on Home? I guess they don't count. Fucking normies.
If this ad stuff is true, I’ve been eyeing a switch from iPhone to postmarketOS on the Oneplus 6 - the mobile phosh Linux experience is really starting to look pretty daily drivable for my simpler phone use cases.
Personally I’m deep in the Apple ecosystem. I don’t think I’d leave because of this ads idea, but I share would get pissed off a lot because of it.
They’re already annoying even the faithful with ads for Apple One, Apple TV+, and Apple Arcade. It’s been mentioned as garish and obnoxious on multiple relatively pro Apple podcasts.
I don’t the entire fan base would just sit there and take it. I think they’d see a strong reaction.
Have you considered buying used? This can be better for the environment and privacy.
This article reads like the other completely unsubstantiated Apple rumors.
Bloomberg has a long history of quoting "sources briefed on the matter" type articles and this doesn't feel any different.
It is quite ironic though how Apple takes steps to prevent dark practices by advertisers, but they utilize dark patterns like filling up the news stories for certain stocks in the stocks app with stories that are only accessible using News+. How many times do we need to be asked to buy that crap?
We all have opinions. And I have invested a ton of money in Apple products in 20+ years of usage. Constructive criticism is not "Bashing".
CSAM was a blatant attempt for breaching user privacy and classification with third party agency hidden criteria. We live in a surveillance economy and ads are the highway for privacy abuse. Apple argument: "We don't share the user data" has no ground for me.
In the increasingly connected world, with billions of data points, trusting a big tech behemoth is a suicide act. Allegedly. :)
> Actually, CSAM had a positive in my life.
This post sounds like a confession that you had CSAM on your machines and because of that switched away from Apple.
(Read what you wrote out loud expanding the acronym)
Politico reports that the European Union is planning on announcing a new law requiring tech giants to scan for CSAM. That would leave Apple having to figure out how to comply without reigniting the controversy.
https://9to5mac.com/2022/05/11/apples-csam-troubles-may-be-b...
I feel like there's a good amount of FUD about this, so for anyone who might not know: All online file hosts do CSAM matching against known CSAM images, regardless of the client OS(s) you're using. In Apple's case specifically, matching only happens to images you've uploaded to iCloud Photos.¹
¹ https://www.apple.com/child-safety/pdf/Expanded_Protections_...
And also, something being a cash cow at the moment does not mean that thing will continue to be one. Since the iPhone 6ish, iPhones have become “good enough”; there’s not much to differentiate each model from the previous as there was with, say, the iPhones 3GS and 4. The iPhone 13 just doesn’t have much going for it compared to the 12.
Apple's Plan to "Think Different" About Encryption Opens a Backdoor to Your Private Life.
"That’s not a slippery slope; that’s a fully built system just waiting for external pressure to make the slightest change."
https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2021/08/apples-plan-think-diff...
It's great that you've found an alternative that suits you but I think it's disingenuous to argue that Apple is the culprit.
Talk to your representative.
There is no reason for them not to own the premium-business market with all day battery, but still powerful machines. Mac runs the office suite, Mac runs your browser and Teams, Zoom or whatever your organization uses. It runs figma, it runs your IDE, etc.
There are definitely areas where they don't work, and they don't really have a meaningful desktop, and some companies will have speciality software that isn't browser based.
But in general the boss-and-above market has very little reason to not use an Apple Air.
I think they do. Note that Apple can still track conversions on apps (gaming apps is where the money is), which basically no-one else can without getting ATT agreement. Note additionally how Apple (and Google's) business are conveniently excluded from ATT concerns (because they track installs differently).
Like the gaming advertisers on iOS have nowhere else to go now that Apple have hobbled the competition, which they tried to do with App Store ads about 5 years ago.
I remove brand labels from nearly all of my possessions. I don’t watch television and I listen to NPR. Add advertising to my phone?
Hmm. Always wanted to try that e-ink phone, Lite Phone. Prolly have my Motorola Razor in a drawer…
A Mini-chassis-based SE with a headphone jack and a touchID home button would be a day 0 buy for me -- I wouldn't even wait for reviews.
Unfortunately I think Apple's treating the headphone jack (on iOS devices) like USB-A, not like the SD card slot or the HDMI port (on the Mac) -- the backlash hasn't been strong enough for them to backtrack.
Of course, that leaves me trapped in the failed evolutionary path of my touchID, small-sized, headphone-jacked 2016 iPhone SE that's losing iOS support this fall. The Zenfone 9 has me intrigued as a modern SoC with solid cellular band coverage and most of the features I want. But it's still bigger than I'd like.
Please re-read my argument. I expect more from this community.
> Good for you for buying Windows Pro, what about everybody and their grandma else stuck on Home? I guess they don't count. Fucking normies.
Please re-read my argument. I expect more from this community.
So how do you keep your hacker card while stilling buying Macbooks and iPhones? Well, its because the "other side" isn't just worse than Apple. They are actually evil. And while Apple is a dictator, they are benevolent. And so thats actually a good thing because Apple is using the immense unilateral power bestowed upon them to protect us from the evils of non-Apple Big Tech.
What we learned about Apple over the weekend was pretty incredible.
Apple tried to extort Facebook for a portion of its ad revenue (arguing that boosted posts paid for by iOS users were IAP).
Facebook didn't relent. Apple couldn't bully Facebook like it did Tumblr (by rejecting app updates until boosted posts were implemented as IAP) so instead they eventually crushed its core business with ATT. Does anyone actually think that Apple would have done that if it were getting a cut?
Now, we see that Apple is expanding its own advertising business.
Its really sort of remarkable when you think about it. They are acting exactly like the mob. Pay us or we'll crush you. And after we burn your laundromat down, we might just build our own to replace it. No doubt that if this were Google, people would be screaming for the DOJ to break the company apart on anti-trust grounds and it would be justified.
Oh sure, their "crack marketing team" (as Craig calls them) will probably just call them "promos" or "previews", or perhaps even "teasers" - but I don't call a bull turd sprinkled with icing sugar a "confection" - I call out bullshit for what it is, and Apple has ads on their TV service already.
That's right, *ads*.
It's those damn ads for their other shows, that I *didn't* ask about, nor *care* about, yet I'm forced having to deal with fast-forwarding/skipping this B.S. when I wanted to just start watching the actual show I wanted to watch. Not even Netflix pulls this kind of crap; they respect you by simply having any 'previews' within the menus - they don't outright shove it in your face like arrogant Apple does.
I didn't quit paying for cable TV with its incessant insult to your intelligence referred to as "commercials" to pay for ads on streaming services.
If there's anyone that can make the 20-mins-of-commercials-before-the-movie "experience" the new 'normal' for streaming services, it's Apple, and I sure AF won't reward them in that endeavour. (Suffice to say I didn't subscribe after my trial ended.)
(now watch all the Apple fanbois downvote my post in 3... 2... 1... (but not before seeing the next AppleTV+ "preview"))
It has already disabled the ability of 3rd party apps to perform tracking locally while preserving privacy by "disabling the ability of apps to share data locally within a device". If you click an Amazon ad on Facebook and open the Amazon app, Apple will not allow Amazon to report a successful conversion locally (thus preserving privacy) to the Facebook app.
However the same restriction won't apply to Apple as they are the operating system.
Note that Apple is always complaining about "privacy", not Ads. They are going to go all in on Ads.
[1] I suspect law enforcement will still be able to access the local data from the phone, so the privacy preserving tracking might not work when you need it the most.