Apple products are designed to protect your privacy.

At Apple, we believe privacy is a fundamental human right.

And so much of your personal information — information you have a right to keep private — lives on your Apple devices.

Your heart rate after a run. Where you bought your last coffee. What websites you visit. Who you call, email or message.

Every Apple product is designed from the ground up to protect that information. And to empower you to choose what you share and with whom.

We’ve proven time after time that great experiences don’t have to come at the expense of your privacy and security. Instead, they can support them.

Only you can access your device.

You can easily secure your devices with a six-digit passcode, which is very tough to crack since there are a million possible combinations. Or enrol in Touch ID or Face ID, the two most advanced security technologies on personal devices. For even more security, you can create an alphanumeric passcode that’s as complex as you want.

Your personal data belongs to you, not others.

Whether you’re taking a photo, asking Siri a question or getting directions, you can do it knowing that Apple doesn’t gather your personal information to sell to advertisers or other organisations.

Your Apple Pay transactions are safe.

Apple Pay gives you a safer, more private way to pay in stores, in selected apps and on participating websites. When you use an eligible credit or debit card with Apple Pay, we don’t keep transaction information that can be tied back to you, so we can’t create a history of your purchases. And to make sure your credit card information is safe, we turn it into a unique code and keep it walled off from the rest of your iOS device. Neither Apple nor your device shares actual credit card numbers with merchants during purchases.

Your features improve while your data stays private.

When we use data to create better experiences for you, we work hard to do it in a way that doesn’t compromise your privacy. One example is our pioneering use of Differential Privacy, where we scramble your data and combine it with the data of millions of others. So we see general patterns, rather than specifics that could be traced back to you. These patterns help us identify things like the most popular emoji, the best QuickType suggestions and energy consumption rates in Safari.

Whether you store it or send it, your data is protected.

Whenever you buy a birthday present with Apple Pay, send an iMessage to a friend or make a FaceTime call, your data is encrypted for your protection. The same is true for the personal information that lives on your device. For example, the data used to identify you for Touch ID and Face ID is not stored on Apple servers or backed up to iCloud. It is converted into mathematical representations that are encrypted and protected by the Secure Enclave on your device, where they cannot be accessed by iOS or apps.

Your apps play by your rules.

We require app developers to agree to strict guidelines designed to protect your privacy. If we learn that an app violates these guidelines, the developer must address the issue or face removal from the App Store. If an app you’ve installed on your device wants to access personal information like photos or contacts, you’re prompted to give permission first. You can change these permissions whenever you want.