Site icon MarTech Cube

Pixalate:Ad Fraudsters May Be Spoofing iCloud Private Relay Traffic

Pixalate

Pixalate, the global market-leading fraud protection, privacy, and compliance analytics platform for Connected TV (CTV) and Mobile Advertising, today released new research examining adoption of Apple’s iCloud Private Relay, technology designed to protect iCloud+ users’ privacy by obfuscating their IP address.

According to Pixalate’s research into 70 billion open programmatic ad impressions from Safari browsers between May-August 2022, 21% of Safari traffic – across both Mac OS X Safari and iOS Safari – is associated with an iCloud Private Relay IP address. However, Pixalate detected the privacy-protecting tech in only 2% of such purported Safari traffic.

Based on Apple’s explanation of iCloud Private Relay and how it is designed to function, these results appear to be unexpected and could be either an intentional misrepresentation of traffic (IVT) or a failure of the iCloud Private Relay to hide users’ true IP addresses.

“Advertisers and DSPs should be aware of the increasing use of iCloud Private Relay and the loss of transparency about the user that results from this privacy-protection technology,” said Ian Trider, VP of RTB Platform Operations at Basis. “In addition, DSPs and exchanges should be mindful of what appears to be a growing trend of bad actors spoofing iCloud Private Relay IP addresses in bid requests. Additional protection solutions may be necessary to prevent this misrepresented traffic.”

KEY TAKEAWAYS

Unless iOS 16, expected to be released next month, makes significant changes that increase overall adoption of iCloud Private Relay, the actual amount of valid traffic with iCloud Private Relay / Obfuscated IP addresses may still remain relatively low.

Apple developed iCloud Private Relay as a means to allow iPhone, iPad and Mac users to connect to the internet in a secure and private manner. The use of iCloud Private Relay is significant to sellers and advertisers because it is designed to hide users’ actual IP addresses, reducing accuracy of user profiles, and could affect the bottom line of publishers and sellers. This is one of several privacy initiatives from Apple, along with the removal of 3rd party cookies and limiting Identifiers for Advertisers (IDFA).

Tune in to Martech Cube Podcast for visionary Martech Trends, Martech News, and quick updates by business experts and leaders!

Exit mobile version