![]() ![]() StayFree observes your Safari usage through an extension that prompts for permission to observe every single website you visit. Although it may initially be somewhat sluggish and prone to errors, we anticipate ongoing improvements in future updates. We are introducing usage monitoring for applications in addition to websites! This marks the first stage of the feature, which is currently in beta. But the latest iOS release, version 2.2, claims: StayFree provides analytics to help you understand how you are using the internet (daily website usage statistics) and focus your time by restricting the usage of distracting websites. This app works with the Safari web browser on your iOS device. StayFree - Web Analytics & Screen Time Tracker is an analytics, self control, productivity, and web addiction controller extension. You can set usage limits for your apps and receive alerts when exceeding those usage limits. StayFree - Screen Time & Limit App Usage is a self control, productivity and phone addiction controller app that allows you to show how much time you spend on your smartphone and helps you focus by restricting the usage of apps. StayFree - Another “screen time tracker”, available for both Android and iOS. As a screen-time monitor, you can see how this app would, by definition, provide Sensor Tower with information about everything a user does on their phone. The developer is listed as “ActionDash”, not Sensor Tower, but the app’s website says “Copyright © 2020 Sensor Tower, Inc” in the footer. They name these apps, but don’t link to them, so I will:ĪctionDash - Exclusive to Android, ActionDash is described as a “screen time helper” that is “trusted globally by over 1 million users to break their phone addiction”. So Sensor Tower’s information comes from analytics it collects from its own apps. ![]() Games provide entertainment and escape for users, such asĪdvanced apps and browser plugins provide convenience, such asįriendly Streaming, Friendly Retail, Stayfocusd and Adblock Luna Wellbeing apps aid in improving our users’ quality of life, such The team in our app studio publishes apps in several categories: That our panelists understand what data they are providing us in Panelists provide us data as they use our popular They get this dataįrom a statistical panel of consumers we have built toĬontinuously learn from millions of people around the world. To cultivate our one-of-a-kind data estate. Our data scientists and algorithms process and enrich trillions ofĪggregated data points contributed to us from millions of devices, Here’s what Sensor Tower claims about their data collection, under “ Where our data comes from”: They aren’t Apple or Google (the owners of the app stores through which Threads remains exclusively distributed, and mobile OSes that report back analytics data from all users who opt-in), nor do they have any access to Meta’s own copious data. But how much should we take Sensor Tower’s usage data at face value? Sensor Tower can only estimate these numbers, it can’t know them. One thing that’s struck me while following this is just how many of these stories cite Sensor Tower data. I wrote earlier this week about the onslaught of “ turns out Threads is a bust” news stories following in the wake of “ Threads launches as a sensational hit” stories. Wednesday, the platform’s number of daily active users were downĪbout 20% from Saturday, and the time spent for user was down 50%, In user engagement since Threads’ launch: On Tuesday and “In theġ0-plus years Sensor Tower has been estimating app installs, theįirst 72 hours of Threads was truly in a class by itself.”īut, he added, Sensor Tower data suggests a significant pullback Sensor Tower, a marketing intelligence firm, told CNBC. The Sensor Tower models,” Anthony Bartolacci, managing director at “The Threads launch really did ‘break the internet,’ or at least Sensor Tower and Similarweb, the service has seen some dropoff in Last week, the text-based social media platform reported a recordġ00 million sign-ups in just five days, but according to data from ![]() Hayden Field, reporting for CNBC last month: What’s the Deal With Sensor Tower? Saturday, 5 August 2023 ![]()
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