论文标题
再见跟踪? iOS应用跟踪透明度和隐私标签的影响
Goodbye Tracking? Impact of iOS App Tracking Transparency and Privacy Labels
论文作者
论文摘要
跟踪是一种高度隐私的数据收集实践,由于其在支持基于广告的收入模型中的作用,它在移动应用程序中已经无处不在。作为回应,苹果对iOS 14:应用程序跟踪透明度(ATT)进行了两次重大更改,该应用程序是一种强制性选择系统,用于启用iOS跟踪和隐私营养标签,该系统披露了每个应用程序流程的哪些数据。到目前为止,这些变化对个人隐私和控制的影响尚未得到充分理解。本文通过分析英国应用商店的1,759个iOS应用的两个版本来解决这一差距:一个版本是iOS 14之前的一个版本,并且已更新以遵守新规则。 我们发现,据承诺,苹果的新政策阻止了广告商(IDFA)的标识符(用于跨应用跟踪的标识符)的收集。从事侵入性数据实践的较小数据经纪人现在将在跟踪用户方面面临更高的挑战,这是隐私的积极发展。但是,跟踪库的数量在研究的应用程序中大致保持不变。许多应用程序仍然收集可用于在组级别(队列跟踪)跟踪用户或以概率(指纹)识别个人的设备信息。我们通过使用服务器端代码来发现应用程序计算的现实证据并就指纹衍生的标识符达成共识,从而违反了苹果的策略。我们发现,苹果本身从事某些形式的跟踪和免除侵入性数据实践,例如第一方跟踪和信用评分。我们还发现,新的隐私营养标签有时是不准确和误导的。 总体而言,我们的发现表明,尽管跟踪个人用户现在更加困难,但这些变化增强了守门人公司的现有市场能力,可以访问大量的第一方数据并激励反击。
Tracking is a highly privacy-invasive data collection practice that has been ubiquitous in mobile apps for many years due to its role in supporting advertising-based revenue models. In response, Apple introduced two significant changes with iOS 14: App Tracking Transparency (ATT), a mandatory opt-in system for enabling tracking on iOS, and Privacy Nutrition Labels, which disclose what kinds of data each app processes. So far, the impact of these changes on individual privacy and control has not been well understood. This paper addresses this gap by analysing two versions of 1,759 iOS apps from the UK App Store: one version from before iOS 14 and one that has been updated to comply with the new rules. We find that Apple's new policies, as promised, prevent the collection of the Identifier for Advertisers (IDFA), an identifier for cross-app tracking. Smaller data brokers that engage in invasive data practices will now face higher challenges in tracking users - a positive development for privacy. However, the number of tracking libraries has roughly stayed the same in the studied apps. Many apps still collect device information that can be used to track users at a group level (cohort tracking) or identify individuals probabilistically (fingerprinting). We find real-world evidence of apps computing and agreeing on a fingerprinting-derived identifier through the use of server-side code, thereby violating Apple's policies. We find that Apple itself engages in some forms of tracking and exempts invasive data practices like first-party tracking and credit scoring. We also find that the new Privacy Nutrition Labels are sometimes inaccurate and misleading. Overall, our findings suggest that, while tracking individual users is more difficult now, the changes reinforce existing market power of gatekeeper companies with access to large troves of first-party data and motivate a countermovement.