iOS 12.2 and Safari 12.1 for macOS Include Updated Intelligent Tracking Prevention Feature

safari iconSafari in the iOS 12.2 beta and Safari 12.1 for macOS High Sierra and Mojave includes an updated version of Intelligent Tracking Prevention, according to details shared on Apple's WebKit blog.

ITP 2.1, as Apple is calling it, caps client-side cookie storage to seven days. After this time period, cookies expire. As outlined by Apple, this offers improvements in privacy, security, and performance. From Apple's WebKit blog:

- Cross-site trackers have started using first-party sites' own cookie jars for the purpose of persistent tracking. The first-party storage space is especially troublesome for privacy since all tracker scripts in the first-party context can read and write each other's data. Say social.example writes a user tracking ID as a news.example first-party cookie. Now analytics.example, adnetwork.example, and video.example can leverage or cross pollinate that user tracking ID through their scripts on news.example.

- Cookies available in document.cookie can be stolen by speculative execution attacks on memory. Therefore, they should not carry sensitive information such as credentials.

- Cookies available in document.cookie can be stolen by cross-site scripting attacks. Again, therefore, they should not carry sensitive information such as credentials.

- The proliferation of cookies slows down page and resource loads since cookies are added to every applicable HTTP request. Additionally, many cookies have high entropy values which means they cannot be compressed efficiently. We come across sites with kilobytes of cookies sent in every resource request.

- There is a size limit on outgoing cookie headers for performance reasons, and websites risk hitting this limit when cross-site trackers add first-party cookies. We've investigated reports of news site subscribers getting spuriously logged out, and found that trackers were adding so many cookies that the news site's legitimate login cookie got pushed out.

The cookie storage limits will not log users out as long as websites are using the appropriate authentication cookies because it only affects cookies created through document.cookie.

ITP 2.1 also allows for just a single set of cookies per site rather than multiples, and third party tools with cross-site tracking capabilities need to use the Storage Access API to get cookie access.

Apple says this change simplifies cookie behavior for developers, lowers the memory footprint of Safari, and makes Intelligent Tracking Prevention compatible with more platforms.

A verified partitioned cache for cutting down on cache abuse for tracking purposes is also included, and as we covered earlier this month, support for Do Not Track has been disabled.

Apple says that it is removing Do Not Track because most websites never paid any attention to it since it was opt-in and could be ignored.

The DNT project recently ended without the publication of a standard, in part "because there has not been sufficient deployment of these extensions (as defined) to justify further advancement." Given the lack of deployment of DNT and Safari's on by default privacy protections such as ITP, Safari removed support for DNT so that users are not presented with a misleading and ineffective privacy control that, if anything, only offered additional browser fingerprinting entropy.

Additional details on the Intelligent Tracking Prevention updates being introduced are available via Apple's full WebKit blog post.

Tag: Safari

Popular Stories

iPhone 17 Pro Dark Blue and Orange

iPhone 17 Release Date, Pre-Orders, and What to Expect

Thursday August 28, 2025 4:08 am PDT by
An iPhone 17 announcement is a dead cert for September 2025 – Apple has already sent out invites for an "Awe dropping" event on Tuesday, September 9 at the Apple Park campus in Cupertino, California. The timing follows Apple's trend of introducing new iPhone models annually in the fall. At the event, Apple is expected to unveil its new-generation iPhone 17, an all-new ultra-thin iPhone 17...
iPhone 17 Pro Iridescent Feature 2

iPhone 17 Pro Clear Case Leak Reveals Three Key Changes

Sunday August 31, 2025 1:26 pm PDT by
Apple is expected to unveil the iPhone 17 series on Tuesday, September 9, and last-minute rumors about the devices continue to surface. The latest info comes from a leaker known as Majin Bu, who has shared alleged images of Apple's Clear Case for the iPhone 17 Pro and Pro Max, or at least replicas. Image Credit: @MajinBuOfficial The images show three alleged changes compared to Apple's iP...
iphone 16 pro ghost hand

iPhone 17 Pro: 5 Reasons Not to Upgrade This Year

Monday September 1, 2025 4:35 am PDT by
Apple will launch its new iPhone 17 series this month, and the iPhone 17 Pro models are expected to get a new design for the rear casing and the camera area. But more significant changes to the lineup are not expected until next year, when the iPhone 18 models arrive. If you're thinking of trading in your iPhone for this year's latest, consider the following features rumored to be coming to...
xiaomi apple ad india

Apple and Samsung Push Back Against Xiaomi's Bold India Ads

Friday August 29, 2025 4:54 am PDT by
Apple and Samsung have reportedly issued cease-and-desist notices to Xiaomi in India for an ad campaign that directly compares the rivals' devices to Xiaomi's products. The two companies have threatened the Chinese vendor with legal action, calling the ads "disparaging." Ads have appeared in local print media and on social media that take pot shots at the competitors' premium offerings. One...
iOS 18 on iPhone Arrow Down

Apple Preparing iOS 18.7 for iPhones as iOS 26 Release Date Nears

Sunday August 31, 2025 4:35 pm PDT by
Apple is preparing to release iOS 18.7 for compatible iPhone models, according to evidence of the update in the MacRumors visitor logs. We expect iOS 18.7 to be released in September, alongside iOS 26. The update will likely include fixes for security vulnerabilities, but little else. iOS 18.7 will be one of the final updates ever released for the iPhone XS, iPhone XS Max, and iPhone XR,...

Top Rated Comments

AngerDanger Avatar
85 months ago
Eh, I never liked that tracking prevention stuff. Just be smart, and advertisers won't learn a thing about you.



Attachment Image
Score: 39 Votes (Like | Disagree)
IRockThat828pScreen Avatar
85 months ago
Can you elaborate? Your screenshot doesn't seem to illustrate much other than you being interested in Singles sites.

Some ideas for people:
[LIST=1]
* Use Private Browsing for sites you don't want tracking you. This loads the site into a blank slate, with no existing cookies in place.
* Use /etc/hosts to block common ad-serving hosts. These load from 127.0.0.1 (localhost) and the requests will never leave your computer.

wooosh
Score: 16 Votes (Like | Disagree)
techguy9 Avatar
85 months ago
Can you elaborate? Your screenshot doesn't seem to illustrate much other than you being interested in Singles sites.

Some ideas for people:
[LIST=1]
* Use Private Browsing for sites you don't want tracking you. This loads the site into a blank slate, with no existing cookies in place.
* Use /etc/hosts to block common ad-serving hosts. These load from 127.0.0.1 (localhost) and the requests will never leave your computer.

It’s a joke comment.
Score: 10 Votes (Like | Disagree)
keysofanxiety Avatar
85 months ago
Eh, I never liked that tracking prevention stuff. Just be smart, and advertisers won't be able to learn a thing about you.

This made my evening. Thank you.

Can you elaborate? Your screenshot doesn't seem to illustrate much other than you being interested in Singles sites.

Some ideas for people:
[LIST=1]
* Use Private Browsing for sites you don't want tracking you. This loads the site into a blank slate, with no existing cookies in place.
* Use /etc/hosts to block common ad-serving hosts. These load from 127.0.0.1 (localhost) and the requests will never leave your computer.

I know of two things that can break the speed of sound: the Concorde, and that joke flying over your head.
Score: 9 Votes (Like | Disagree)
swanseaboy Avatar
85 months ago
If only we could have a functional cookie manager...
Score: 7 Votes (Like | Disagree)
smithrh Avatar
85 months ago
I completely wipe cookies every time I think of it - say, every 1-3 days.

It's never been a negative.

Cookies aren't for users, they're for advertisers and people who want to track you.

Passwords aren't an issue with password fill.
Score: 5 Votes (Like | Disagree)