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Procter & Gamble Co. was one of the companies that worked with the China Advertising Association to test a new data collection tool designed to get around Apple's App Tracking Transparency rules, reports The Wall Street Journal.

nba-tracking-prompt-green.jpg

The state-backed China Advertising Agency developed a new method of tracking users called CAID to replace access to the IDFA or advertising identifier of an iPhone or iPad. Starting with iOS 14.5, Apple will not let apps access the IDFA of a device without express user permission, which will have an impact on cross-app and cross-website tracking used for ad targeting.

CAID has been in testing in China with major companies like Baidu, ByteDance (TikTok), and Tencent, as well as Proctor and Gamble. Apple in mid-March began warning developers not to circumvent App Tracking Transparency rules with methods like CAID. Apple has told developers that attempting to get around the new ad tracking restrictions will result in removal from the App Store.

"The App Store terms and guidelines apply equally to all developers around the world, including Apple," an Apple spokesperson told The Wall Street Journal. "We believe strongly that users should be asked for their permission before being tracked. Apps that are found to disregard the user's choice will be rejected."

As a major worldwide advertiser, P&G has a vested interest in tracking users, and is the biggest Western company involved in the efforts to create an App Tracking Transparency alternative. P&G owns many major brands that include Gillette, Charmin, Pampers, Tide, Bounty, Pantene, Crest, Febreeze, and tons more.

In a statement, P&G told The Wall Street Journal that it is providing input to the China Advertising Agency in an effort to "deliver useful content consumers want in a way that prioritizes data privacy, transparency and consent." Delivering useful content to consumers "means partnering with platforms and publishers--both directly and through our advertising associations across the globe."

P&G maintains its own consumer database that does not rely on Facebook, Google, and other ad platforms. According to The Wall Street Journal, P&G has built a database of 1.5 million customers worldwide using a combination of anonymous consumer IDs and personal information that customers share. P&G largely uses this database in China, where it spends 80 percent of its digital ad buying on targeted ads.

P&G declined to offer additional details on the CAID tool and did not say whether it will use the technology. It is not yet clear how Apple will respond to CAID if some of the biggest companies in the world adopt the ad tracking alternative. When news about the warnings to Chinese developers came out, a Chinese marketing industry veteran said that Apple's actions could "put a stop" to CAID testing.

Other U.S. companies that include Deloitte, PricewaterhouseCoopers, and Nielsen are also working with the China Advertising Agency on CAID.

Update: Proctor & Gamble shared additional information on its discussions with the China Advertising Association. The discussions centered around developing additional ways to reach Chinese consumers with digital ads.
Here are the facts: P&G - along with 30 others - participated in discussions about developing additional ways to reach Chinese consumers with digital ads. Like all our work in this area, our input prioritized data privacy, transparency and consent for consumers - priorities we have long advocated for as the entire industry modernizes the way it reaches consumers with digital advertising. The principles and standards of this effort were also publicly available, clearly stating that the proposed industry effort - called CAID - can be turned on and off by consumers, protect user data, and not be linked to personal information.

Article Link: P&G Wanted to Skirt App Tracking Transparency Rules With China Data Collection Tech [Updated]
 
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justperry

macrumors G5
Aug 10, 2007
12,559
9,749
I'm a rolling stone.
Shady, hope Apple will stand its ground when developers break the rule.



P&G owns many major brands that include Gillette, Charmin, Pampers, Tide, Bounty, Pantene, Crest, Febreeze, and tons more.
You might check the article, Bounty is a MARS product.
See screenshot.
Edit: Seems like it's a paper towel not know to me/us in Europe.
drlunanerd pointed that out to me, cheers.
 

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brendu

Cancelled
Apr 23, 2009
2,472
2,703
Screw the Chinese Communist Party and any American companies who cater to their demands rather than standing up for peoples freedoms. Double screw the American companies who bow to China but preach equity and ”wokeism” at Americans.
 

dannyyankou

macrumors G5
Mar 2, 2012
13,162
28,305
Westchester, NY
Shady, hope Apple will stand its ground when developers break the rule.



You might check the article, Bounty is a MARS product.
See screenshot.

Edit: Seems like it's a paper towel not know to me/us in Europe.
drlunanerd pointed that out to me, cheers.
It’s also a proctor and gamble product. These conglomerates can get confusing sometimes

F1B4B678-DEB9-42FA-AAFA-93F611D3A260.png
 

Apple_Robert

Contributor
Sep 21, 2012
34,612
50,318
In the middle of several books.
Gonna add on last thing, any company caught violating app transparency rules should be kicked from the App Store for one year. A second offense, 2 years. and if caught a third time...

permanent ban from App Store.
That would be great to see but, I don''t think Apple has the courage to take such a stand.
 

iGeek2019

macrumors 6502a
Jul 26, 2019
766
2,319
No Selection
Yes there was Bounty (chocolate) and Bounty (kitchen towel) in the past but as stated above it’s now known as Plenty and owned by Swedish company SCA in Europe.
 

mtneer

macrumors 68040
Sep 15, 2012
3,179
2,714
That weird capitalization in the headline caught me reading it as "P&G wants to track skirts"??

I guess that's as bad as what they wanted to do with the Chinese tracking ID.
 

mdriftmeyer

macrumors 68040
Feb 2, 2004
3,821
2,002
Pacific Northwest
Screw the Chinese Communist Party and any American companies who cater to their demands rather than standing up for peoples freedoms. Double screw the American companies who bow to China but preach equity and ”wokeism” at Americans.

If you didn't live through the Cold War your absurd Nationalism would be noted. The world became a global economy after WWII. You want to make a difference, great. Go join the IMF and work with other nations that need lifting up and will monetarily open more opportunities for corporations to have less dependencies on China.

Apple has a three pronged approach that soon China will be begging for their manufacturing investments once more. Will you be complaining sooner rather than later that Apple has a huge investment in India for manufacturing? We've got Vietnam, India, China and other lesser global manufacture nations in Apple's chain of productions. I get the feeling you won't be satisfied with anything but US Manufacturing which of course would provide zero jobs or near zero jobs, increases in product prices all so you can beat a drum and drape yourself in the flag that pretends to be the leader of freedom when it has historically used its might for corporate extortion, especially in East Asia and South America.
 

jclo

Managing Editor
Staff member
Dec 7, 2012
1,973
4,308
Shady, hope Apple will stand its ground when developers break the rule.



You might check the article, Bounty is a MARS product.
See screenshot.
Edit: Seems like it's a paper towel not know to me/us in Europe.
drlunanerd pointed that out to me, cheers.

I didn't know there was a Bounty chocolate bar. In the U.S., Bounty is the "quicker picker upper" paper towel.
 
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