2021年5月10日 星期一

On Tech: Stay safe from app tracking

What we can learn from Apple's privacy labels, and how we can better protect our information.

Stay safe from app tracking

Derrick Schultz

Thorin Klosowski dug deep into new disclosures from iPhone apps that show what information they collect about us and for what purpose.

He emerged both confused and concerned about our digital economy, which relies on apps that are obfuscating what is happening with our personal information.

Thorin, an editor for The New York Times's product review site Wirecutter, spoke with me about his research into the app tracking disclosures of 250 iPhone apps, why people should care about app tracking and tips for people to protect their information.

Why should people be bothered by digital data collection? If a weather app knows all of the times I went to McDonald's and in return I get local weather forecasts, isn't that a fair trade?

For many people, yes. But it's not a truly informed trade.

Let's say you see in the description in the iPhone app store that a weather app records your location all of the time and keeps a record of all of the apps where you have entered the same email address. You have no way of knowing what the app maker needs that data for or whether that information is sold or shared with other companies.

What could go wrong?

The facial recognition start-up Clearview AI is an example of what happens when information that we put out in the world for one purpose gets collected and used for another — in that case, assembling an online photo database of millions of people — that none of the participants really consented to.

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We have little control about what happens to our personal information. Even just trying to understand what happens to our data is exhausting. I have written about digital privacy for years, and I still find it extremely complicated.

Is the bottom line that these Apple app privacy disclosures, which are modeled on food nutrition labels, are better than nothing but still not very useful?

That's it. These labels lack context. You can't compare apps easily, so it's difficult to know what's normal activity for an app in any category, and what might be overreaching.

And after spending far more time than I anticipated digging into this, I'm not confident that this information on app tracking is helpful. I'm glad that the Apple privacy labels exist, but only as a first step for the public to understand how the whole data-collection economy is fundamentally broken.

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Let's find something positive! Are there apps that you have looked at that collect relatively little data?

The messaging app Signal is one, and a notes app called Bear. And almost all of the games that were part of Apple Arcade, the company's $4.99 monthly video game subscription service, appeared to have minimal data collection.

What's your advice to people who are concerned about their personal data being collected?

Apps on your phone that you're not using regularly needlessly expose you to more data collection. My top recommendations are to delete any apps that you're not using, and don't download an app at all if you're going to use it only once or occasionally. Using the website version of a service instead of the app is often a better alternative because the data collection tends to be less aggressive.

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If you had absolute power, what's one thing that you would change to better preserve our personal data?

I think I would get rid of personalized advertising that's based on what we do, where we go or what our interests are. Digital ads based on our personal information are at the root of what's wrong with our online economy.

Read more: Android said that it planned to follow Apple's lead in requiring data collection disclosures in its app store. The Android data tracking labels will start next year.

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TIP OF THE WEEK

How to block digital tracking

Personalized ads aren't just on apps, they can follow you around websites, too. Here is Brian X. Chen, the consumer technology columnist for The Times, on ways to keep digital companies from collecting our personal information:

Targeted ads are creepy. If you were window shopping in real life and looked at a pair of expensive shoes, would you want a flyer for the shoes to be permanently stuck to your car? That's basically how personalized online ads behave. I call them stalker ads.

A few years ago, I wrote a column on defeating stalker ads with brute force. Most of that advice is still relevant today. The bottom line is that you need multiple techniques to block ads on the web and inside mobile apps. Here are a few steps:

  • Install an ad blocker. For your web browser, you can install add-ons that block ads. My favorite one for computer browsers is uBlock Origin, and on iPhones I recommend 1Blocker.For Android users, Google banned many ad blockers from its official Play app store. The simplest way to block ads is by using a private web browser, as I detail next.
  • On mobile devices, use a private browser. Firefox Focus, DuckDuckGo and Brave are privacy-centric mobile browsers that include built-in ad and tracker blocking. These are handy when you want to do a discreet web search. I wrote more about these web browsers here.
  • Install a tracker blocker. These detect computer code on websites that snoop on people and prevent the trackers from loading. My favorite tracker blocker for desktop systems is Disconnect.me, and for mobile devices I like Barracuda CloudGen Access (free on both iOS and Android.) Here is more on Apple's new settings that allow iPhone owners to ask apps not to track them.
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Before we go …

  • A scary computer attack on a fuel pipeline: Cybercriminals forced the temporary shutdown of a pipeline that carries nearly half of the East Coast's gasoline and jet fuel supply. My colleagues looked at what this might do to fuel prices, and whether such critical infrastructure would be better protected under a White House draft proposal to mandate digital security standards for federal agencies and contractors.From last month: Nicole Perlroth explained why infrastructure like pipelines are so vulnerable to ransomware, the type of cyberattack that affected this fuel pipeline.
  • Campus contention over virtual exam proctoring: Some Dartmouth medical students accused of cheating on online exams said that administrators relied on faulty data from course assignment software that tracked student activity during remote exams without their knowledge. My colleagues Natasha Singer and Aaron Krolik examined the campus tensions at Dartmouth and asked: Can technology used to catch cheaters be accurate, fair and transparent?
  • Back to classrooms isn't that simple: Some children and parents aren't eager to return to in-person school because they have reordered their lives in the past year in ways they don't want to undo, my colleague Dana Goldstein reported. It's a nuanced analysis of what experts call "school hesitancy," and what officials are doing to convince families to return.

Hugs to this

We should love wasps! They control pests, pollinate plants and do other important tasks to help ecosystems, human health and the economy. Also, "they can strip a bird clear of meat within a few hours," a behavioral ecologist told CNN.

We want to hear from you. Tell us what you think of this newsletter and what else you'd like us to explore. You can reach us at ontech@nytimes.com.

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2021年5月8日 星期六

Say Something Nice About Yourselves, For Once!

This Mother's Day, revel in your strengths.
A roundup of new guidance and stories from NYT Parenting.
Golden Cosmos

Every evening at bedtime, I pick one of my 4-year-old's numerous kitty stuffed animals and do an extended call-and-response of meows and "I love yous" in high-pitched feline voices. Even though she has so many plush toys perched next to her she can barely fit on the bed, I know every single animal's name. Kiki, Giselle, Lottie, Leona and Hope are the current favorites, and I know the order that she wants them arranged and trotted out during our extended bedtime ritual.

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This perhaps seems like a small and insignificant part of my parenting day, but it always makes me proud, because it tells my daughter: I hear you. Because you are 4, your kitties are essential to you, and so they're important to me, too.

For Mother's Day, we commissioned a series of essays on this theme: moms saying something nice about themselves, for once. Especially this year, it seems as if all mothers do is talk about our perceived failures: how we're failing at remote schooling, or making the wrong choices for our kids when all the options are bad, or not being the "fun mom."

Here is a chance for mothers and mother figures to take a moment to actually revere themselves, and all the big and small things they do for their families. We have Amber Tamblyn on the melody she sings to soothe her kid, and herself; Veronica Chambers on teaching her daughter Spanish; Kate J. Baer on feigning interest in Minecraft, and so much more. Make sure to add your secret maternal skill in the comments!

Also this week, lots of news for parents of teenagers: Perri Klass on how to plan for your teen's Covid vaccines, as the CDC recommends they not get any other shots within a two-week window of receiving the inoculation; Taylor Trudon on the new rituals teenagers are creating to mark occasions like prom and graduation that aren't quite the same during a pandemic; and Constance Sommer spoke to parents who are struggling to raise adolescents with the stresses of the past year.

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Finally, there's Lisa Thompson's review of the graphic novel "Allergic," written by Megan Wagner Lloyd and illustrated by Michelle Mee Nutter, about a girl named Maggie who cannot get a puppy, because of her severe allergies. I will definitely be buying this one for my 8-year-old, who has tree nut allergies and also is extremely jealous of her friends who got pandemic puppies (it's not happening in this house, honey).

Happy Mother's Day!

— Jessica Grose, columnist, NYT Parenting

P.S. We are continuing the Primal Scream project, which looks at the experience of parenting during the past year, and we want to hear from you if you have made major life changes because of the pandemic. That could mean moving to a new location, becoming more or less ambitious at work, developing an entirely new point of view on motherhood or deciding to have that second kid … or not.

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Please email us here if you would like to be interviewed for this follow up, and include your name, age, location and a paragraph about what has changed for you. We will not publish anything without permission.

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12 Moms on Their Secret Strengths

Moms spend a lot of time cataloging their failures. This Mother's Day, revel in your talents.

By The New York Times; Illustrations by Janet Mac

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Tiago Majuelos

The Checkup

With Covid Vaccines for Teens and Kids, Timing Matters

There can be a seven- or eight-week window around Covid vaccines when other shots can't be given, so those who need them for camp, school or sports have to plan ahead.

By Perri Klass, M.D.

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Rich-Joseph Facun for The New York Times

'We Feel Lost in Time': Covid Transforms Teen Milestones

As Sweet Sixteens, proms and graduation ceremonies were disrupted or canceled, kids turned their losses into opportunities for new traditions with friends.

By Taylor Trudon

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Stephen B. Morton for The New York Times

Teens Are in Crisis. So Are Their Parents.

As hard as it is to be a teen today, it's draining being the parent of one.

By Constance Sommer

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Children's Books

Pet Project

In the graphic novel "Allergic," a young girl is relentless in her quest for a furry friend.

By Lisa Thompson

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Tiny Victories

Parenting can be a grind. Let's celebrate the tiny victories.

After running out of ideas and struggling to get my 2-year-old to sit the right way in her car seat, I randomly asked her, "What are my eyebrows doing!?" She was quite intrigued and turned around to watch as I made my eyebrows do a funky dance of sorts. I've never buckled her in so easily before!— Bailey Wright, Fort Collins, Colo.

If you want a chance to get your Tiny Victory published, find us on Instagram @NYTparenting and use the hashtag #tinyvictories; email us; or enter your Tiny Victory at the bottom of this page. Include your full name and location. Tiny Victories may be edited for clarity and style. Your name, location and comments may be published, but your contact information will not. By submitting to us, you agree that you have read, understand and accept the Reader Submission Terms in relation to all of the content and other information you send to us.

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