Year: 2022

Facebook-parent Meta sued for bypassing Apple privacy rules to track users

Facebook-parent Meta Platform was sued on Wednesday for allegedly building a secret work-around to “App Tracking Transparency” privacy safeguards that Apple launched last year to protect users from having their internet activity tracked.

In a proposed class-action complaint filed Wednesday in San Francisco federal court, two Facebook users accused the company of skirting Apple’s 2021 privacy rules and violating state and federal laws limiting the unauthorized collection of personal data. A similar complaint was filed in the same court last week.

The suits are based on a report by data privacy researcher Felix Krause, who said that Meta’s Facebook and Instagram apps for Apple’s iOS inject JavaScript code onto websites visited by users. Krause said the code allowed the apps to track “anything you do on any website,” including typing passwords.

The Facebook app gets around Apple privacy rules by opening web links in an in-app browser, rather than the user’s default browser, according to Wednesday’s complaint.

“This allows Meta to intercept, monitor and record its users’ interactions and communications with third parties, providing data to Meta that it aggregates, analyzes, and uses to boost its advertising revenue,” according to the suit.

Via: Bloomberg News

iOS 16: How to enable Haptic Feedback on an iPhone

One of the most useful (and not well known) features of iOS 16 is the ability to have haptic feedback (have the phone vibrate) when someone uses the keyboard. This can assist new and experienced users with getting used to typing on the device's keyboard.

Here's how to enable it:

  1. Go to Settings > Sounds & Haptics > Keyboard Feedback.
  2. Toggle the switch for Haptic to the ON position.
  3. That's it.

Now you'll feel the haptic feedback when you go into virtually any app that allows typing.

 

 

How to call someone using Siri on iOS

Last week, I wrote an article about ideas on how to teach your child how to call 9-1-1 using an iPhone.  In that article, I hinted that you could use Siri to also contact someone in your contacts. Well, here's how to do it.

  1. Activate Siri.
  2. Say "Hey Siri, call Bob Smith."
  3. If that contact has more than one number, it'll ask which one to call.
  4. Siri then calls the contact.
  5. That's it!

Siri can also do a lot more.  Stay tuned to find out what else it can and cannot do.

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