Apple’s grudging accommodation of European antitrust rules by allowing third-party app stores on iPhones has left users of its Safari browser exposed to potential web activity tracking.
Developers Talal Haj Bakry and Tommy Mysk looked into the way Apple implemented the installation process for third-party software marketplaces on iOS with Safari, and concluded Cupertino’s approach is particularly shoddy.
What kind of Apple propaganda is this?
If you’d read the article, you’d have realized it’s specifically because of a bad implementation by Apple of their URI scheme for handling links.
They’re literally suggesting users use Brave over Safari because it isn’t susceptible to cross-site scripting in the same way.
They urge iOS users in Europe to use Brave rather than Safari because Brave’s implementation checks the origin of the website against the URL to prevent cross-site tracking.
This is anything but Apple propaganda. It’s literally calling Apple out on a huge failure of their own design.
My comment was in jest.
Then I retract my statement and hope you have a good day.
Let’s agree on that 🤝 and thanks for the explanation anyway 🫡
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Apple’s grudging accommodation of European antitrust rules by allowing third-party app stores on iPhones has left users of its Safari browser exposed to potential web activity tracking.
Developers Talal Haj Bakry and Tommy Mysk looked into the way Apple implemented the installation process for third-party software marketplaces on iOS with Safari, and concluded Cupertino’s approach is particularly shoddy.
A website offering an alternative software marketplace can include a button that, when tapped in Safari, launches a marketplace-kit: request that is handled by a MarketplaceKit process on the EU user’s iPhone.
Apple doesn’t allow third-party app stores in most parts of the world, citing purported privacy and security concerns – and presumably interest in sustaining its ability to collect commissions for software sales.
Second, Apple’s MarketplaceKit – its API for third-party stores – doesn’t validate the JSON Web Tokens (JWT) passed as input parameters via incoming requests.
Back when Apple planned not to support Home Screen web apps in Europe – a gambit later abandoned after developer complaints and regulatory pressure – the iGiant justified its position by arguing the amount of work required “was not practical to undertake given the other demands of the DMA.”
Saved 77% of original text.
Apple – which advertises Safari as “incredibly private” – evidently has undermined privacy among European Union Safari users through a marketplace-kit: URI scheme that potentially allows approved third-party app stores to follow those users around the web.
I don’t see Apple deliberately sabotaging their platform to maliciously comply and blame the regulation for making users less safe. This was probably an error caused by quick development to comply within a set timeline that will be resolved in the future through software changes.
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