Safari’s Privacy Features Work Better Than Chrome’s, By Default

What You Need to Know
- Safari blocks third-party cookies by default, a feature Chrome still lacks.
- Apple’s privacy campaign emphasizes consumer choice while Safari remains iOS’s locked default browser.
- Safari masks IP addresses from known trackers and strips tracking parameters from URLs.
- Google’s advertising-dependent business model explains slower privacy feature adoption than Apple’s.
Apple’s privacy ad campaign is a decade old at this point, and the formula has barely changed: ordinary people, absurdist metaphors for surveillance, a quiet implication that switching phones solves the problem. The new Safari spot swaps the usual shadows and whispers for chrome-suited figures literally perching on strangers’ shoulders, which is at least a more honest visual metaphor for behavioral tracking than most advertising manages.
What the ad does not say is that Safari’s privacy protections are real and measurable. Third-party cookie blocking, IP masking from known trackers, and URL parameter stripping in Private Browsing are features Chrome still does not offer by default, even after years of Google’s repeatedly delayed Privacy Sandbox rollout. Google’s core business depends on advertising revenue in a way Apple’s simply does not, which explains the gap better than any technical argument.
The more interesting tension here is that Apple is running a privacy ad while Safari remains locked as the default engine on iOS, giving users less choice than they would have on Android or desktop. The browser is genuinely more private than Chrome in several measurable ways, but the campaign frames it as a straightforward consumer choice when the iOS ecosystem makes it structurally the path of least resistance.
What Safari Actually Offers
The specific protections Apple lists on its website include:
- Third-party cookie blocking enabled by default
- Machine learning-based tracker detection
- Tracking parameter removal from URLs in Private Browsing
- IP address concealment from known trackers
- Web extensions blocked from accessing browsing data by default
Chrome has introduced some of these features in limited or opt-in forms, but not as a default configuration for standard browsing sessions.
Apple has run this Privacy on iPhone series long enough that the ads function less as product education and more as brand positioning. The chrome suits are new. The argument is not.
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