Analyzed Companies
Browse TOS grades for popular apps and services.
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Amazon
Vast data collection across shopping, Alexa, streaming, and smart home — all feeding a unified advertising machine.
Analyzed Mar 13, 2026
ChatGPT (OpenAI)
Trains AI on your conversations by default with limited opt-out transparency.
Analyzed Mar 13, 2026
Discord
Better than most social platforms on privacy, but growing ad ambitions and broad content rights warrant attention.
Analyzed Mar 13, 2026
Facebook (Meta)
One of the most invasive data collection ecosystems on the internet, tracking you across apps and the web.
Analyzed Mar 13, 2026
The most comprehensive data profile in tech, spanning search, email, location, and the entire advertising web.
Analyzed Mar 13, 2026
Instagram's terms grant Meta sweeping rights to your content and data, with aggressive data collection practices that go well beyond what's needed for a photo-sharing app.
Analyzed Mar 13, 2026
LinkedIn (Microsoft)
Your professional identity and network connections fuel Microsoft's AI and advertising, with opt-out for training buried in settings.
Analyzed Mar 13, 2026
Your posts are training AI models via paid data licensing deals, and pseudonymous accounts are less private than you think.
Analyzed Mar 13, 2026
Spotify
Spotify's terms are fairly standard for a streaming service, with reasonable data practices but notable gaps in user content rights and an aggressive arbitration clause.
Analyzed Mar 13, 2026
TikTok
TikTok's terms grant exceptionally broad rights over your content and collect an alarming amount of data, including biometric information, with limited transparency about data flows to ByteDance.
Analyzed Mar 13, 2026
Uber
Tracks every trip with precise location data, shares with insurers and advertisers, and retains data long after you stop riding.
Analyzed Mar 13, 2026
X (Twitter)
Aggressive data harvesting for AI training with minimal transparency and a deteriorating privacy posture.
Analyzed Mar 13, 2026