A Hidden Feature In iOS 8 Will Stop Marketers From Spying On You
When your phone scans for networks, it sends out a MAC address that contains an identifier unique to your phone. Your MAC address is a little bit like a tagging device-it lets companies know things like your phone make, as well as whether you're a repeat customer at a certain store. That's how they use it to recommend deals based on your habits, just like London's failed program to use smart trash cans to track consumers using MAC addresses last year.
But as a Swiss programmer named Frederic Jacobs pointed out on Twitter yesterday, iOS 8 contains a little MAC address change with big implications. It automatically randomizes MAC addresses. That would mean that marketing companies wouldn't be able to track your patterns at all.
https://twitter.com/FredericJacobs...It's definitely good news. But does it mean that Apple has somehow come out against these insidious companies? Not exactly.
In fact, you could even speculate that barring MAC address-slurping companies from targeting Apple users is a way to bolster their own location-aware Bluetooth notification project: iBeacon. As Apple Insider pointed out last week, Apple is making a major push to revamp it, piloting a program that will ping users walking near the Apple Store or Starbucks.
So while randomizing MAC addresses will make you invisible to mobile marketers, don't rejoice just yet-iBeacon may be waiting in the wings. [Qz]
Lead image: joyfull.