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AdGuard’s digest: Google pays Apple, X wants to replace your bank, YouTube’s ad blocking detection faces a privacy challenge

In this edition of AdGuard’s Digest: report reveals how much Google pays Apple, a controversial ‘anti-encryption’ bill becomes law, X wants to be your bank, YouTube faces a surprise challenge, OpenAI is preoccupied with doomsday thoughts.

Google paid Apple $18 bn to remain iPhone’s default search engine

Apple and Google are bitter rivals, competing at many battlegrounds, ranging from mobile operating systems and app stores to advertising. However, they are also close partners. It has never been much of a secret that Google pays Apple huge sums of money to be the default search engine in Safari across all Apple’s devices. The only question was: how much? And now The New York Times has it answered.

The Times reported, citing people with the knowledge of the deal, that Google paid Apple a whopping $18 billion in 2021. To put this into perspective, in 2022 Apple generated “just” around $4.7 billion with its own global advertising business. According to the report, Google also actively worked to nip Apple’s aspirations to build its own search engine that could compete with Google Search. After Apple’s built-in Spotlight search feature started to perform exceptionally well, Google concocted a plan to introduce a similar feature in Chrome. Google is also planning to use the new anti-competition laws in the EU to its advantage. The laws should force Apple to open its closed ecosystem to other companies, including Google. Google believes that once it happens, a number of European iPhone users with Chrome would triple, according to the internal documents cited by the Times.

The report reveals that While Apple and Google compete fiercely in many domains, they also cooperate to maintain their dominance and influence. These deals behind the scenes lead to centralization and stifle innovation and diversity in the tech industry. Moreover, Google’s desire to exploit the EU regulation to make the browser market even more centralized is worrying, as it could undermine user choice, privacy, and security.

UK’s ‘anti-encryption’ bill becomes law

A controversial piece of legislation, which can potentially undermine online privacy and security, has become law in the UK. The so-called ‘Online Safety Bill’ received royal assent on Thursday, and will now be enacted in several stages.

One of the law’s stated goals is to stop the spread of child sexual abuse material (SCAM) both when it communicated “publicly or privately,” the latter meaning in private messages. Earlier this year, heads of the most popular end-to-end encrypted messengers, including WhatsApp, Viber, and Signal, argued that this clause effectively means that they will have to scan private chats, and this is impossible to implement without undermining end-to-end encryption (E2EE). They threatened to leave the country if this part of the law is not removed. Later (we wrote about it here), the UK regulator said that it won’t use the law to force service providers to scan messages because there was no safe and secure way to do so at the moment.

However, this does not mean that the British government won’t enforce the so-called “spy clause” in the future. As for us, we are not at all sure that the UK will keep its promise. In any case, now that the ‘Online Safety Bill’ has become law, it will be interesting to see how the situation unfolds. Specifically, whether service providers will back down or buckle up under the threat of fines of up to 10 percent of their annual global turnover. For one thing, Signal president Meredith Whittaker has already stated that Signal would rather leave the country than be “forced to build a backdoor.”

Signal President says that the messenger will rather leave the UK than compromise encryption

Musk wants you to ditch your bank in favor of X

Would you trust a social network with your finances? If you ask us, the answer is a resounding “no.” First of all, banks may not be without their shortcomings, but they have perfected the craft of safeguarding our money over the years through trial and error. On the other hand, social networks have proven not to be as trustworthy, just by the way they handle (or rather mishandle) our personal data. And X (formerly Twitter) is no exception. Regardless, the platform’s current owner, Elon Musk, wants the app to become the center of people’s financial lives.

According to The Verge, Musk told a recent staff meeting that he wants X to handle payments, adding: “When I say payments, I actually mean someone’s entire financial life.” Musk further clarified, sounding increasingly ominous: “If it involves money. It’ll be on our platform… like you won’t need a bank account.” Musk’s vision of turning the microblogging service into a bank replacement is consistent with his idea of X as an “everything app,” similar to China’s WeChat. But the idea, however grand, has been met with skepticism.

Musk has said he wants the financial features to launch by the end of 2024. Whatever form they take, we strongly advise against trusting X (or Facebook, or Snapchat, or YouTube…) with your finances, and especially from transferring your entire financial life to a platform with a poor privacy and security record.

YouTube, in war with ad blockers, faces an unexpected privacy challenge

YouTube has always been hostile to ad blockers, but lately it has stepped up its war against them. The Google-owned platform now displays annoying pop-ups to some users with ad blocking tools and blocks their video playback if they don’t disable them. YouTube claims that it has the right to do so, citing a violation of its terms of service, but a privacy advocate is now challenging this claim.

Alexander Hanff, a privacy advocate, filed a complaint with the Irish Data Protection Commission (DPC) against YouTube’s use of JavaScript code to detect ad blockers. He told The Register that this code violates the EU privacy laws, specifically the ePrivacy Directive. This directive requires explicit consent from users for any access to or storage of information on their devices that is not strictly necessary for providing the requested service. Hanff argues that YouTube’s ad block detection script (which is now updated daily) is not necessary for its service and, consequently, should not be allowed to interfere with users’ browsers without their consent. YouTube, at present, does not ask for this consent.

YouTube’s terms of service do not explicitly prohibit ad-blocking extensions, but they do say that users should not “interfere with any part of the service” — which presumably includes ads. It’s a murky legal issue, so it will be interesting to see what the Irish regulator says in response to the complaint. For his part, Hanff has mentioned that the European Commission told him as far back as in 2016 that the use of such ad-blocking scripts should require consent.

OpenAI will investigate chemical, biological, and nuclear threats posed by AI

OpenAI is plagued by a growing number of legal challenges, including copyright infringement and privacy claims. However, the issue that seems to have the company’s leadership in its thrall is the threat of extinction posed by AI.

The company has set up a special team, called Preparedness to assess “catastrophic risks from frontier AI will.” The team will evaluate various scenarios, such as AI deceiving humans, cybersecurity breaches, chemical, biological, radiological, and nuclear attacks, and “autonomous replication and adaptation” — or, in other words, AI going rogue.

The team’s mission is commendable, but it may also distract from more immediate and realistic risks posed by AI, such as privacy, authorship, and ethics. We have written extensively about these issues here and here.

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AdGuard for Windows

Windows 版 AdGuard 不只是廣告封鎖程式,它是集成所有讓您享受最佳網路體驗的主要功能的多用途工具。其可封鎖廣告和危險網站,加速網頁載入速度,並且保護兒童的線上安全。
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AdGuard for Mac

Mac 版 AdGuard 是一款獨一無二的專為 MacOS 設計的廣告封鎖程式。除了保護使用者免受瀏覽器和應用程式裡惱人廣告的侵擾外,應用程式還能保護使用者免受追蹤、網路釣魚和詐騙。
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AdGuard for Android

Android 版的 AdGuard 是一個用於安卓裝置的完美解決方案。與其他大多數廣告封鎖器不同,AdGuard 不需要 Root 權限,提供廣泛的應用程式管理選項。
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AdGuard for iOS

用於 iPhone 和 iPad 的最佳 iOS 廣告封鎖程式。AdGuard 可以清除 Safari 中的各種廣告,保護個人隱私,並加快頁面載入速度。iOS 版 AdGuard 廣告封鎖技術確保最高質量的過濾,並讓使用者同時使用多個過濾器。
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AdGuard 內容阻擋器

AdGuard 內容阻擋器將消除在支援內容阻擋器技術之行動瀏覽器中的各種各類廣告 — 即 Samsung 網際網路和 Yandex.Browser。雖然比 AdGuard for Android 更受限制,但它是免費的,易於安裝並仍提供高廣告封鎖品質。
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AdGuard 瀏覽器擴充功能

AdGuard 是有效地封鎖於全部網頁上的所有類型廣告之最快的和最輕量的廣告封鎖擴充功能!為您使用的瀏覽器選擇 AdGuard,然後取得無廣告的、快速的和安全的瀏覽。
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AdGuard 助理

AdGuard 桌面應用程式的配套瀏覽器擴充功能。它為瀏覽器提供了自訂的元件阻止的功能,將網站列入允許清單或傳送報告等功能。
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AdGuard DNS

AdGuard DNS 是一種不需要安裝任何的應用程式而封鎖網際網路廣告之極簡單的方式。它易於使用,完全地免費,被輕易地於任何的裝置上設置,並向您提供封鎖廣告、計數器、惡意網站和成人內容之最少必要的功能。
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AdGuard Home

AdGuard Home 是一款用於封鎖廣告 & 追蹤之全網路範圍的軟體。在您設置它之後,它將涵蓋所有您的家用裝置,且為那您不需要任何的用戶端軟體。由於物聯網和連網裝置的興起,能夠控制您的整個網路變得越來越重要。
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AdGuard Pro iOS 版

除了在 Safari 中之優秀的 iOS 廣告封鎖對普通版的用戶為已知的外,AdGuard Pro 提供很多功能。透過提供對自訂的 DNS 設定之存取,該應用程式允許您封鎖廣告、保護您的孩子免於線上成人內容並保護您個人的資料免於盜竊。
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AdGuard for Safari

自 Apple 開始強迫每位人使用該新的軟體開發套件(SDK)以來,用於 Safari 的廣告封鎖延伸功能處境艱難。AdGuard 延伸功能可以將高優質的廣告封鎖帶回 Safari。
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AdGuard Temp Mail

免費的臨時電子郵件地址產生器,保持匿名性並保護個人隱私。您的主收件匣中沒有垃圾郵件!
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AdGuard Android TV 版

Android TV 版 AdGuard 是唯一一款能封鎖廣告、保護隱私並充當智慧電視防火墻的應用程式。取得網路威脅警告,使用安全 DNS,並受益於加密流量。有了安全性和零廣告的使用體驗,使用者就可以盡情享受最喜愛的節目了!
已開始下載 AdGuard 點擊箭頭所指示的檔案開始安裝 AdGuard。 選擇"開啟"並點擊"確定",然後等待該檔案被下載。在被打開的視窗中,拖曳 AdGuard 圖像到"應用程式"檔案夾中。感謝您選擇 AdGuard! 選擇"開啟"並點擊"確定",然後等待該檔案被下載。在被打開的視窗中,點擊"安裝"。感謝您選擇 AdGuard!
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