With iOS about to come out of the oven, its privacy news begins to gain space on Apple's pages and in the concerns of companies that base their business model on marketing their users' data, such as Facebook and Google (but not just them).
One of the privacy news that is being incorporated this year concerns the App Store, as all apps will need to obtain the user's permission before carrying out a follow-up, as we have already mentioned. Before the end of this year, the App Store application pages will incorporate summaries, submitted by the developers themselves, of the privacy practices used by their apps, in a simple and easy-to-understand format.
Additionally, Apple makes it mandatory to incorporate login with Apple, so they don't have to share their data with other companies, choose whether they want to share their approximate location rather than exact location, or see an app's use of the camera and microphone.
Additionally, developers will need to include the type of data the app collects, if shared with other companies, and include the option to unsubscribe from data collection.
In a new document uploaded to the Developer Support website, Apple explains the information developers will need to provide on those App Store pages for users. Apple is delegating the disclosure of its privacy policies to developers, who will have to contribute during the fall. We can expect next year to be filled with news about apps collecting data in a different way than they explain in their docs, with Apple either deleting accounts or suspending apps until fixed.
Apple insists that developers identify "every possible way they collect and use data" by offering a list of data types that will appear on App Store labels.
Users can access details of data collected by an app, from name and email to payment information, contacts, etc. Apps will need to specify whether they access photos, text, browsing history, purchase history and when, and if they collect advertising and diagnostic data.
Here you can see the press release on iOS 14 with information on how the privacy information they provide is presented. app developers. And in this press release he explains a little more about the new technologies that are coming to developers, including information on data collection from apps.