Apple’s new developer guidelines are out, and they now allow developers to advertise to users via notifications, something Apple has strictly forbidden in the past.

Why This Matters

Apple has always been strict on advertising through app notifications, but it’s apparently relaxed the rules as long as users can opt-in (and opt-out).

What they said: “Push Notifications should not be used for promotions or direct marketing purposes unless customers have explicitly opted in to receive them via consent language displayed in your app’s UI,” writes Apple in the guidelines, “and you provide a method in your app for a user to opt out from receiving such messages.”

By The Numbers

  • 70% of all Apple devices use iOS 1377% of all devices shipped in the last 4 years run iOS 1357% of all Apple devices use iPadOS79% of all iPads run iPadOS

As The Verge notes, this new change may be motivated by a couple of times that Apple bent its own rules and sent out push notifications that read like ads. This could be a way for the company to continue the practice without looking like it’s getting away with special treatment as the platform holder.

The bottom line: Don’t worry too much that we’ll suddenly have a ton of ads in our push notifications. Apple’s guidelines still say “Do not use Apple Services to spam, phish, or send unsolicited messages to customers, including Game Center, Push Notifications, etc.”

Ultimately, you might get a few more push notifications that let you know about sales or other useful information from apps you have installed on your iPhone. Remember, though, you have to agree to let it happen, and you can opt-out at any time. That’s not too horrible, is it?

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