Apple has initiated a global advertising campaign highlighting the privacy advantages of its Safari browser over Google Chrome, escalating the browser war between the two tech giants.
Forbes reports that Apple has taken a significant step in its ongoing rivalry with Google by launching a worldwide advertising campaign that emphasizes the privacy features of its Safari browser. This strategic move comes as Google aims to increase Chrome’s install base among iPhone users from 30 percent to 50 percent, potentially bringing an additional 300 million users into its data ecosystem.
The campaign, which began locally in San Francisco and has since expanded globally, features billboards and a compelling video advertisement inspired by Alfred Hitchcock’s The Birds. While not explicitly mentioning Chrome, the message is clear: Safari offers superior privacy protection for online users.
Apple’s new video ad applies the unsettling imagery from The Birds to smartphone privacy, creating a powerful and memorable message. The ad suggests that using Safari is the best way to avoid being watched online, implying that Google Chrome does not offer the same level of privacy protection.
Apple attacks #Android and #Google Chrome head-on in a new ad.
— yoda.creative (@yoda_creative) July 18, 2024
To highlight its #Safari browser, #Apple has chosen to tackle data collection in other browsers. Data privacy as a new narrative in the American giant's communication?pic.twitter.com/LAoqgnQY1Q
This advertising push coincides with Apple’s release of “Private Browsing 2.0,” an update to Safari that introduces enhanced security and privacy features. Apple states, “We’ve enhanced web privacy immensely and hope to set a new industry standard for what Private Browsing should be.” This update further solidifies Apple’s commitment to user privacy and puts additional pressure on Google Chrome.
The timing of Apple’s campaign is particularly significant as Google faces potential disruption to its financial arrangement with Apple, which currently makes Google the default search engine on Safari. Monopoly investigations in the United States and Europe could curtail this agreement, prompting Google to seek alternative ways to maintain its dominance in the mobile search market.
Privacy has long been a contentious issue for Google Chrome. The browser has faced criticism for its handling of tracking cookies, with plans to phase them out delayed due to regulatory challenges. Recent reports have also highlighted concerns about Chrome capturing device data through a hidden setting that users cannot disable.
Apple’s campaign also addresses Google’s proposed Topics API, which is intended to replace tracking cookies. The Cupertino-based company argues that this new system may still allow for extensive user profiling when combined with other data points and advanced machine learning techniques. Apple states, “Imagine what advanced machine learning and artificial intelligence can deduce about you based on various combinations of interest signals.”
The browser market share on mobile devices is predominantly split between Safari and Chrome, with the two browsers collectively holding over 90 percent of the market. On iPhones, the competition is even more direct, with users primarily choosing between these two options.
Read more at Forbes here.
Lucas Nolan is a reporter for Breitbart News covering issues of free speech and online censorship.