KEY POINTS
  • Austrian privacy activist Max Schrems' non-profit group Noyb alleges Apple's use of a tracking code on iPhones breaches European law.
  • Apple had originally planned to require app developers to ask users if they want to opt-in to such tracking, but it has delayed this feature.
  • Schrems has risen to fame in the last decade for taking on Facebook over the transfer of European citizens' data to the U.S.
Apple CEO Tim Cook reveals the new iPhone 12.

LONDON — Apple on Monday found itself the target of two complaints from Austrian privacy activist Max Schrems, who has successfully fought Facebook in historic legal battles twice before.

Schrems' Vienna-based non-profit group, Noyb, filed complaints in Germany and Spain alleging Apple's use of a tracking code on iPhones, called IDFA, breaches European law.