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.

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.

Editors' Recommendations

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…
10 iPhone productivity apps you need to download right now
iPhone 14 Pro showing the Moon always-on screen, held in a man's hand.

If you're anything like us, your Apple iPhone is a beast with multiple uses. It can go from an email-firing machine to a dedicated Netflix device in seconds and then into playing video games just as fast. But just because it can do all of those things doesn't mean it couldn't stand a little fine-tuning when it comes to optimizing it for productivity.

"Productivity" can mean a lot of things, whether it's sending emails, making tweaks to documents and spreadsheets, or just planning for your day ahead. Whatever being productive means to you, there are apps that will make it easier. Here are 10 iPhone productivity apps you need to download today.
Todoist
The best to-do app

Read more
The 10 best photo editing apps for Android and iOS in 2024
A person holding the Samsung Galaxy S24 Ultra and Google Pixel 8 Pro.

Samsung Galaxy S24 Ultra (left) and Google Pixel 8 Pro Andy Boxall / Digital Trends

Smartphones tend to have pretty good camera systems these days, whether you're talking about the very latest Samsung Galaxy S24 Ultra or the iPhone 14. But even the perfect photo can sometimes need a little additional pizazz. A little extra sparkle can come in the form of a simple color filter, artificially added background blur, or can extend as far as diving into an image's levels and other advanced features. Heck, now that we're in the AI era, it can also include using a tool to transpose yourself into a medieval setting or swapping a face with a friend.

Read more
This one thing could make iOS 18 the best iPhone update in years
The Home Screen on the iPhone 15 Pro Max.

Apple’s WWDC 2024 is just a couple of months away. As with every WWDC, we’ll see what Apple has in store for the next generation of software across its hardware portfolio, including the iPhone with iOS 18.

Rumors have been swirling about iOS 18 and how it will be “one of the biggest updates yet.” We know some features like RCS support in Messages are definitely coming, with other whispers of big home screen customization changes and more.

Read more