Article Date: 03/30/22
Transcend, the platform that allows users to encode privacy across a company's tech stack has released the results of its latest survey of technology decision-makers, which assessed their readiness for Apple's in-app deletion requirements for iOS apps that offer account creation. The findings show that 71 percent of companies surveyed are not fully prepared to meet Apple's June 30, 2022 compliance date. The tech giant's guidance requires iOS applications that allow account creation to allow for in-app deletion of not just a consumer's account but deletion of their entire personal data footprint.
In addition, Transcend's research found that:
Looming In-App Deletion Deadline
"The results of our new research and Apple's extension of their original January 2022 deadline show just how hard privacy compliance can be to implement. Delivering on privacy should be frictionless. But companies know that truly addressing consumer data rights at scale, beyond bare minimum compliance, is next to impossible without engineering work across data systems. Manual approaches just can't keep up in a world where consumer data flows so quickly," said Transcend CEO and Co-founder Ben Brook.
After working with leading consumer brands to help easily solve the issue, Transcend is rolling out a new product as part of their privacy platform that specifically equips companies with the ability to programmatically delete user accounts and erase personal data through their in-app interface, without the engineering lift. With Transcend's offering, companies can fulfill account and data deletion requests across their entire data footprint with pre-built workflows and include checks or holds as required. With Transcend's dedicated onboarding and technical support, companies can offer fully compliant solutions for Apple's requirements in less than a week.
Apple's Directive
In October 2021, Apple updated its App Store Guidelines to require that "all apps that allow for account creation must also allow users to initiate deletion of their account from within the app."
The company went on to clarify that app providers should "review any laws that may require you to maintain certain types of data and to make sure your app clearly explains what data your app collects, how it collects that data, all uses of that data, your data retention/deletion policies, and more as described in the guideline. Examples of this type of data include electronic health records, and sales and warranty records. Please also confirm that the app privacy information on your product page is accurate."
What This Means for App Developers
Apple has shown increasing scrutiny over app updates and signaled it is not afraid to reject or remove apps from the store when they don't meet guidelines. Moreover, with consumer privacy initiatives at an all-time high for Apple, developers should have every reason to believe Apple will take non-compliance seriously.
If you want to continue reading: https://appdevelopermagazine.com/app-deletion-deadline-from-apple/
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