16 November 2022

GOOD NEWS (Jess Weather spoon): DuckDuckGo’s App Tracking Protection is now available for public beta testing on all Android devices | The Verge

     "In a blog announcing the public beta rollout, DuckDuckGo claims that the average Android user has 35 apps on their phone and can experience between 1,000 and 2,000 tracking attempts from over 70 different tracking companies every day. One example cited using just four apps — Southwest Airlines, Zillow, SeatGeek, and The Weather Network — allows over 45 tracking companies to collect user data such as location, email address, phone number, time zone, and device information (including screen resolution, device make and model, language, and local internet provider). This information can then be sold to companies like data brokers, advertisers, and even governments. Tracking data is also used by companies like Meta and Google to build creepily specific advertising profiles that target users and make them feel as if they’re being listened to.

DuckDuckGo’s App Tracking Protection beta is now available to all Android users

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The tool blocks third-party trackers within Android apps and could reduce the number of creepily specific ads you see online.

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An illustration of a mobile device on a purple background. A white text box in front of the phone reads “DuckDuckGo - now: App Tracking Protection blocked 4,306 tracking attempts across 72 apps.”
DuckDuckGo’s new App Tracking Protection tool aims to prevent apps from tracking Android users and then selling the collected data. 
Image: DuckDuckGo

DuckDuckGo’s App Tracking Protection is now available for public beta testing on all Android devices after launching in a limited beta almost one year ago.

App Tracking Protection for Android is a free feature from the privacy-focused company that blocks third-party trackers within apps, even when said apps aren’t actively being used. When enabled in DuckDuckGo’s browser, it detects when apps are about to send data to a list of third-party tracking companies on DuckDuckGo’s publicly available blocklist and then blocks most of those data requests. It all happens on the device without routing your data through DuckDuckGo’s servers.

A screenshot of a phone displaying a list of apps alongside a number of tracking attempts for each app.
With the App Tracking Protection “Activity Report,” you can see which third parties are trying to track you.
 Image: DuckDuckGo

The App Tracking Protection for Android feature was first unveiled at the end of last year via a private wait list for closed beta testing. Since then, a new feature has been added to the tool that allows users to see what personal data is being collected by trackers in real time prior to blocking, including information like your precise location, age, and your phone’s digital fingerprint. Other changes include general performance improvements, and a 50 percent reduction in apps excluded from tracking protection, many of which rely on tracking to work properly. 

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