Google Tracks 39 Types of Private Data, the Highest Among Big Tech Companies

  • By : Wael Elhosany - Mohamed Elkholy

     

    According to an analysis by StockApps.com, out of the five major digital firms (Google, Twitter, Apple, Amazon, and Facebook), Google harvests the most data on its users. The corporation collects thirty-nine data points for each user.

     

    Commenting on the analysis, StockApps.com Edith Reads said. "Most people do not have the time or patience to read privacy policies that can be several pages long for each website they visit. Also, it is quite unlikely that all users have a background in law to properly grasp the privacy policy.

     

    Besides, users lack time, patience, or energy to try to figure out what information websites are storing and how they are using it to their advantage. As a result, users end up allowing Google to harvest all the data they need by agreeing to the privacy policy terms.  

    Google takes the cake when it comes to tracking most of your data. This should not surprise, given that their entire business model relies on data.

     

    Twitter and Facebook both save more information than they need to. However, with Facebook, most of the data they store is information users enter.

     

    Apple is in a league above Amazon in protecting user privacy. It is the most privacy-conscious firm out there. Apple only stores the information that is necessary to maintain users' accounts. This is because their website is not as reliant on advertising revenue as are Google, Twitter, and Facebook.

     

    Each of these data firms focuses on a particular category of data and not the quantity of data. Google collects more different types of information for individual users. The firm relies on this data for targeted advertising rather than relying on third-party trackers.

     

    Besides users' information, Google stores a significant amount of data on several domains. If it is data, there is a strong probability that Google is collecting it. This includes anything from users' specific location to your browser history. Moreover, it stores user activity on third-party websites or apps and the emails on users' Gmail accounts.

     

    Some people have resolved to use DuckDuckGo as their primary search engine. This is because the search engine promises not to store any user data. The full story and statistics can be found here: Google Tracks 39 Types of Private Data, the Highest Among Big Tech Companies



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