The people who design
marketing apps are celebrating a change in the way iBeacon works on iPhones. That's the Bluetooth-based
system that lets a store track a customer's movements, and capitalize on them.
For instance, if iBeacon detects you lingering in the shoe department, it might
send you a digital coupon for socks.
IBeacon has been around for
a while, and marketers liked the concept in principle. Macy's, Major League
Baseball and American Eagle Outfitters are just a few of the brands that haveexperimented with
the technology. But there was a big practical problem: It only worked when a
customer's phone was running the marketer's app. Once you closed the app, the
tracking stopped.
That problem has now been fixed. When Apple updated
the iPhone's operating system two months ago, it changed it to allow marketing
apps to keep tabs on your location even when they're off. When you close an
app, it "deputizes" the phone's operating system to keep listening for
iBeacon signals on its behalf.
The change was heralded
last month on theblog BEEKn, run by
industry insider Doug Thompson. He says Apple didn't publicize the new system,
but when people working on iBeacon marketing products found out about it, they
were thrilled.
"It was the announcement everybody was waiting
for," Thompson says. He says it eliminates the nagging problem of how to
get customers to open a location-tracking app in the places where it might be
useful.
"It was hard enough to get the [customers] to
download the app," Thompson says. Getting them to reopen it every time
they come back to a place where it's useful was just too cumbersome.
Of course, the change has others spooked.
"As a privacy researcher, I always get nervous
when marketers are celebratory about something," says Garrett Cobarr, a
technologist and writer based in Seattle. He says Apple seems to ignore certain
assumptions that people make about what's happening on a device.
"Most users if you asked them would assume
that if the app wasn't on, it wasn't being used," Cobarr says. He says
finding out a closed app can still track the phone's location "would
surprise most people and perhaps unnerve them."
For Apple's part, the iBeacon explainer separates the company from the third-party
apps that take advantage of this technology: "If you allow third-party
apps or websites to use your current location, you agree to their terms,
privacy policies, and practices," Apple writes.
If iBeacon tracking unnerves you, there are still
ways to turn it off. The simplest is to shut off the Bluetooth function on your
phone. You could also go into settings and restrict a particular marketing
app's access to location services ... or you could simply delete the app
altogether.
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