

“Private Access Tokens are a powerful alternative that help you identify HTTP requests from legitimate devices and people without compromising their identity or personal information,” said Apple.

Google is already working on introducing a similar feature in the Chrome browser, but instead of doing the verification itself, it hands it off to third-party issuers instead.

Private Access Tokens were developed and standardised by Fastly, Apple, Cloudflare, and Google, so there’s a chance this solution could also come into play for Android phones later on. The system does this without sending out personal data such as your email address or phone number. You can learn about the technical stuff by watching Apple’s WWDC demo but basically, Apple will send a Private Access Token to the app or website that you are using, which verifies that both the device and your Apple ID account are in good standing. The two companies are some of the biggest content delivery networks globally, so they cover a significant portion of the internet. When the OS updates are rolled out, users who enable Automatic Verification should be able to smoothly browse most of the internet without encountering CAPTCHAs as long those websites are hosted on either Fastly or Cloudflare. Apple seems to be planning to fix this common annoyance in the upcoming iOS 16 and macOS Ventura updates with a solution called Automatic Verification using Private Access Tokens. Humans always know we’re humans but the same can’t be said for a lot of websites, which constantly require you to pick out cars, hills, bridges, traffic lights, and all sorts of other things through CAPTCHAs to verify that you aren’t a bot.
