Apple plans to start showing ads in its maps app by 2026. This  is a significant shift from the company’s long-standing claim as the Privacy-First tech company. For years, Apple criticized Google and Meta for tracking users to sell ads, and now Apple itself is ready to follow suit. The relevant  advertising requires tracking user behaviours, location patterns, and search queries. 

This is blatant surveillance capitalism that Apple condemned when competitors practiced it. Privacy-focused brand imagining has been their USP that justified premium pricing and ecosystem lock-in, but this ad push shows that profitability eventually wins over principals. 

Growth Runs Out, Ads Move in

Apple adding ads to maps shows that the company is running out of ideas to generate recurrent revenue. With phone sales mildly flattening and services slowing, ads are the next big revenue stream, even if it compromises the long standing brand image. It’s the same path that Amazon took. Start sleek and user friendly then slowly fill every screen with “sponsored” content when growth hits a wall.

All those promises of a better experience are nothing but a marketing gloss on a familiar playbook. As Apple joins the ranks of the platforms monetizing attention rather than delight, its famous focus on simplicity and user-experience might become obsolete as there are now very few differentiators between Apple and other devices. 

Death of the Ad-Free Apple?

Ads in maps could just be the start. Bit by bit the company could expand this new approach. Today it’s maps, tomorrow it could be photos, then imessages and so on. People buy iPhone for a premium, ad-free experience. Apple’s lowest-priced iPhone is more expensive than most of its competitors’ base models. 

This pricing has always been justified by more base storage and premium features, such as “unmatched Privacy”. This means that as ads creep into the once-sacred apps, the company risks diluting the very premium identity that defines its distinction. 

Apple’s move to bring these Ai-driven ads into maps marks a clear turning point. The company that once built its castle on the bricks of privacy and user trust now embraces the same surveillance-style targeting it used to condemn. 

In pursuit of new revenue streams, Apple has transitioned into selling attention from selling premium privacy. The real cost of Apple’s ecosystem lock-in isn’t just the hardware price anymore, it’s how long you can stay ad-free before the next compromise arrives. 


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