Mozilla Research Lashes Out Google Over ‘Misleading’ Privacy Labels on Leading Android Apps

An investigation, conducted by the Mozilla Foundation, into the data safety labels and privacy policy on the Google Play Store has exposed some severe loopholes that enable apps like Twitter, TikTok, and Facebook to give inaccurate or misleading information about how user data is shared. 

The study was conducted between the 40 most downloaded Android apps, out of which 20 were free apps and 20 were paid, on Google Play and found that nearly 80% of these apps disclose misleading or false information. 

The following findings were made by the Mozilla researchers: 

  • 16 of these 40 apps including Facebook and Minecraft, had significant discrepancies in their data safety forms and privacy policies. 
  • 15 apps received the intermediate rating, i.e. “Need Improvement” indicating some inconsistencies between the privacy policies and the Data Safety Form. YouTube, Google Maps, Gmail, Twitter, WhatsApp Messenger, and Instagram are some of these applications. 
  • Only six of these 40 apps were granted the “OK” grade. These apps included Candy Crush Saga, Google Play Games, Subway Surfers, Stickman Legends Offline Games, Power Amp Full Version Unlocker, and League of Stickman: 2020 Ninja. 

Google’s Data Privacy Section 

Google apparently launched its data privacy section for the Play Store last year.

[…]
Content was cut in order to protect the source.Please visit the source for the rest of the article.

This article has been indexed from CySecurity News – Latest Information Security and Hacking Incidents

Read the original article: