Apple is warning their nearly two billion i phone users to immediately delete another tech giant’s app, claiming that your digital privacy is in grave danger.
Without mentioning the company’s name, Apple appeared to tell its users to dump Google’s Chrome internet browser in a video posted on YouTube.
The veiled shot is gaining renewed attention after Google announced on Tuesday that they are backtracking on a promise to remove third-party tracking cookies from Chrome.
These cookies let websites and advertisers track Chrome users’ online activity in order to show them personalized ads – and also creates a multi-billion-dollar revenue stream for Google.
Google previously planned to replace cookies with a new system, giving Chrome users a one-click ‘don’t track me’ option, but those plans fell apart due to widespread fear from the online advertising industry that any replacement would leave less room for online ad rivals.
While tracking cookies themselves are not necessarily malicious, they can lead to privacy risks and, in certain cases, increase the chances of your data being leaked or stolen – including sensitive information like bank records.
This means everything iPhone owners who use Chrome do will continue to be tracked unless they manually clear cookies or use the browser’s Incognito Mode.
Apple has used the controversy to promote their own internet browser, Safari, which promised to be ‘a browser that’s actually private.’

Apple has used the controversy to promote their own internet browser, Safari, which promised to be ‘a browser that’s actually private.’

In a YouTube video that’s been viewed 19 million times, Apple claimed that iPhone users’ privacy wasn’t secure unless they switched to their Safari internet browser

Paying homage to the 1963 film ‘The Birds,’ iPhone users are followed around by flying surveillance cameras spying on their online browsing habits