The Apple Push Notification Service is a free, simple, and safe way to push data to iPhone apps. It fills iPhone's background process gap, albeit imperfectly Apple’s iPhone is renowned for being the ...
All products featured on WIRED are independently selected by our editors. However, we may receive compensation from retailers and/or from purchases of products through these links. Learn more. If you ...
Apple has updated its law enforcement guidelines to now require a court order for sharing push notification data. Revised policy follows scrutiny after tech giants were found providing notification ...
Apple will now require a court order or search warrant to give push notification data to law enforcement in a shift from the previous practice of accepting a subpoena to hand over data. In Apple’s ...
Apple has updated its Legal Process Guidelines to reflect the company's legal obligation to comply with law enforcement requests for Apple ID information associated with its push notification service.
Update: Apple issued the following statement to 9to5Mac: Apple is committed to transparency and we have long been a supporter of efforts to ensure that providers are able to disclose as much ...
A senator's open letter making it public that iPhone push notifications can be used to track users has let Apple publish a warning about the topic. On Wednesday, Senator Wyden made a seemingly wild ...
U.S. Senator Ron Wyden (D-OR) has warned in a letter to the Justice Department that unidentified governments are spying on Apple and Google phone users through their push notifications. The letter ...
The average US smartphone user gets about 46 push notifications a day, according to app analysis firm Business of Apps. OK, let's do some math: There are more than 1.46 billion active iPhone users ...
Foreign governments likely spy on your smart phone usage, and now Senator Ron Wyden's office is pushing for Apple and Google to reveal how exactly it works. Push notifications, the dings you get from ...