ToS;DR
a year ago
- #privacy
- #terms-of-service
- #data-tracking
- Facebook stores user data regardless of account status and can read private messages.
- Amazon uses third-party cookies for advertising and tracks users across websites.
- Wikipedia may process and store data globally and uses tracking technologies.
- DuckDuckGo assumes consent from usage and provides Tor accessibility.
- YouTube retains deleted videos and uses third-party cookies for ads.
- Khan Academy collects extensive personal data and may retain it post-erasure requests.
- Quora tracks users across websites and retains data without interaction.
- Blizzard requires users to waive moral rights and tracks across sites.
- Tor Browser offers anonymity and does not sell personal data.
- PayPal tracks users despite opt-outs and retains deleted content.
- Startpage does not track users and resists legal data requests.
- WikiHow shares personal data with third parties and enforces arbitration.
- CNN changes terms without notice and shares data with non-operational third parties.
- Apple Services edits user content and retains licenses post-account closure.
- ToS;DR provides transparent, peer-reviewed summaries of service terms with grades A (best) to E (worst).