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Privacy-shy apps, DuckDuckGo's duplicity, Google's woes, Mozilla's tradeoff. AdGuard's digest

In this edition of AdGuard’s Digest: Apps overshare your data, DuckDuckGo flirts with a tech giant, patients sue Google, the EU sacrifices privacy to save children, Twitter launches a game, Mozilla’s having it both ways with Manifest V3, and more.

Mental health and prayer apps score dismal on the privacy chart

A new Mozilla survey has found that 28 out of 32 apps that deal with such issues as suicide, depression, sexual violence and religious beliefs have fallen "spectacularly" short of basic privacy standards. Six of the apps — Better Help, Youper, Woebot, Better Stop Suicide, Pray.com, and Talkspace — fared especially poorly. For instance, Pray.com which touts itself as "#1 app for Christians" loves sharing. And while sharing is caring, Pray.com took the notion too literally as it shares user data with third parties for advertising purposes. Moreover, the company can enrich the data with the information on gender, age, ethnicity, income and political views it buys elsewhere, and reserves the right to publish users' name, voice and other personal information for any commercial purpose. Another app on the blacklist is Better Help with its "incredibly vague and messy" privacy policy. The app can share data with advertisers and store client-therapist communications on the platform in an encrypted form. Moreover, it was reported that Better Help shares metadata with Facebook.

Mozilla says mental health apps are "a data harvesting bonanza". Another recently released survey which analyzed data security policies of the 23 most popular women's health apps came to the same conclusion. Half of the apps did not request consent from users to track them, while the absolute majority shared data with third parties.

We at AdGuard are deeply concerned about the low privacy standards employed by the apps. We commend Mozilla for shedding light on this issue. It is high time to change the situation. For now, we strongly recommend that you give apps only the most necessary permissions.

Duck-Duck-Go's tracking deal with Microsoft makes industry squeak

DuckDuckGo had some explaining to do after security researcher Zach Edwards revealed that its mobile browser does not stop Microsoft trackers from running. DuckDuckGo founder Gabriel Weinberg then admitted that his company indeed inked a search deal with Microsoft that allows the tech giant's trackers to operate in DuckDuckGo’s browser for Android and iOS, but not in its privacy-focused search engine.

DuckDuckGo founder is doing some damage control

The agreement, on the surface of it, runs contrary to all what the company stands for. However, after the revelation sent shockwaves across the industry, DuckDuckGo stated that it has "never promised" anonymity when browsing. Weinberg argued that users of DuckDuckGo's browser do not need to worry as it still provides protection from 3rd-party cookies and fingerprinting by imposing restrictions on third-party tracking scripts, "including those from Microsoft". DuckDuckGo also said that the company is seeking "to remove the limited restriction" on blocking Microsoft trackers by renegotiating the deal.

DuckDuckGo's deal with Microsoft

For our part, we at AdGuard are deeply concerned by the deal and its potential impact on the industry, considering that DuckDuckGo and its search engine played a pioneering role for the protection of user privacy.

Surprise, surprise. Google in legal hot water over misuse of data

Old sins come back to haunt Google. The tech giant is now facing a class-action lawsuit that seeks unspecified damages for the alleged misuse of patients' medical records. The complaint was filed in the UK on behalf of 1.6 million people that had their data shared with Google's AI division, DeepMind, without their consent. DeepMind's app received the data from a public healthcare trust. The app was designed to help medics track patients' conditions for the early signs of a disease. The fact that the trust shared patients' data with DeepMind is not new — the current lawsuit is a distant echo of a data scandal that broke out in 2017. At that time only the trust was sued, with DeepMind getting off scot-free. DeepMind argued that it had not shared any data with its parent, Google. That defense now looks flimsy, especially after Google took over the app in 2018. The tech giant had been handling the patients' data up until last year.

We hope that this case will serve as a cautionary tale for tech companies prone to sharing user data without users' expressed consent. We also hope that justice will be served and that privacy violators will be punished.

EU may jeopardize end-to-end encryption and privacy with new child protection feature

Meta, Apple and other tech companies in the EU may soon be forced to scan messages for child sexual abuse materials (CSAM). The proposal is part of the new European Commission's plan to tackle child abuse. Under the law, companies would be tasked with identifying and stopping circulation of not only known CSAM, but also will have to detect new materials and "grooming" in text messages. Grooming is an act of befriending a child to try to persuade them to have a sexual relationship. Tech firms would report to a soon-to-be-created EU center whose staff would manuelly check the materials for false positives before sharing them with police. The law is a follow-up on the temporary regulation agreed by the EU last summer that allowed tech companies to scan images and texts for child abuse on voluntary basis.

The EU says that the "detection orders" to scan messages would be issued by a court or other relevant authority. They should be "limited in time" and target "specific" types of channels, users or groups of users.

The draft has already incurred wrath from privacy advocates. The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) called it a "disaster for online privacy in the EU and throughout the world" that would undermine end-to-end encryption. The developer of the Germany-based secure email service Tutanota argued that monitoring of telecommunications will do little to catch child abusers. He pointed out that while 13,670 children were abused in Germany in 2019, only in 21 cases was an online surveillance order issued.

We at AdGuard believe that while it's important to protect children from digital harm, it should be done through other means and not at the expense of their own privacy. Adding to the concern is the fact that there is a worrying trend of abandoning privacy protections in the name of child safety. For instance, Apple is considering implementing its own CSAM's detection feature. You can read more about it in one of our past articles.

Mozilla solves Manifest V3 conundrum

Feedback is important, when it is heeded to. The case of Mozilla and a controversial set of changes introduced by Google for browser extensions' rules is a good example of this rule. Let us remind you: the changes are being implemented across Chromium-based browsers in the new version of extensions API — Manifest V3. It has drawn its fair share of criticism, including from yours truly for stripping extensions of access rights to web requests and, therefore, of many useful capabilities.

Extension developers that were part of the W3C workgroup expressed concerns over the proposal. And while the feedback effectively fell on deaf ears in Google, Mozilla took cues from it. The company has revealed that it will take the best of both worlds: it will implement Manifest 3 but in such a way that does not limit the functionality of existing and future browser extensions. Firefox will maintain support for blocking WebRequest, but it will also support new, narrower-scoped Google's API which was meant to replace the feature in MV3. Google is gradually phasing out the support for the extensions that employ Manifest V2, and plans to end it completely by June next year.

AdGuard can only salute Mozilla since this news means that content blockers will continue to function in their original, more "powerful" form on the platform. If we are to wage a bet, we believe that filter list maintainers may switch to Firefox as their primary browser, which, in turn, can spell doom for Chrome in the long run. Chrome may become too slow in blocking unwanted content, so users that value their privacy may as well migrate to Firefox.

Musk's Twitter takeover may be in limbo, but pivot to privacy is not?

In the previous edition of our digest we covered the impending purchase of Twitter by Elon Musk for $44 billion. At that time the deal seemed to be all but done. However, since then Musk put his bid to takeover Twitter on hold and is seeking to knock down the price of the tech giant. The billionaire argues that Twitter has underreported the number of "spam bots" on the platform. Twitter puts the number of fake users at 5%, while Musk believes it to be at least 20%.

In the meantime we might already be seeing the early signs of Musk's influence on Twitter's policy. The billionaire previously said he wants to make Twitter more privacy-conscious. So, earlier this month Twitter has stripped its privacy policy of legal jargon. The company said it hopes that it will be easier for users to understand what data it collects, what for and how they can manage privacy settings. So that not only adults but also teens could get Twitter's privacy policy, the company launched a multi-level video web game called 'Twitter Data Dash'. A player should help a dog named "Data" to safely get to the park in "PrivaCity". To do so, one has to "dodge cat ads, swim through a sea of DMs, battle trolls" and learn how to "take control of your Twitter experience".

Screengrab from Twitter's privacy game

Well, not bad, for starters.

Privacy is the new black and Google wants to stay hip

Recently, Google has been straining itself to appear privacy-conscious in the eyes of users. So far with mixed effect: you're welcome to read our in-depth review of the Google privacy initiative — Privacy Sandbox — and its shortcomings here. Now Google has unveiled a new tool that should give users more control over what ads they see on YouTube, in Google search and in their Google feeds. They will be able to fine-tune their ad preferences through the new 'My Ad Center' hub. There, users will be able to tell Google directly which topics and brands they want to see "more or fewer ads about" or turn off "Personalized ads" altogether. Users will be able to disable the feature that allows advertisers to target them with ads based on their age, relationship status, and education.

The tech giant has also announced that it would place a yellow alert over the profile picture in all Google apps if it deems the account not secure enough. The alert should serve as a reminder for users to add another security layer, such as 2-Step Verification.

The credit is due where it's due. We have always approved of 2FA and highly recommend enabling it on your AdGuard account if you haven’t done so yet.

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AdGuard for Windows

Windows 版 AdGuard 不只是廣告封鎖程式,它是集成所有讓您享受最佳網路體驗的主要功能的多用途工具。其可封鎖廣告和危險網站,加速網頁載入速度,並且保護兒童的線上安全。
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Mac 版 AdGuard 是一款獨一無二的專為 MacOS 設計的廣告封鎖程式。除了保護使用者免受瀏覽器和應用程式裡惱人廣告的侵擾外,應用程式還能保護使用者免受追蹤、網路釣魚和詐騙。
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AdGuard for Android

Android 版的 AdGuard 是一個用於安卓裝置的完美解決方案。與其他大多數廣告封鎖器不同,AdGuard 不需要 Root 權限,提供廣泛的應用程式管理選項。
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AdGuard for iOS

用於 iPhone 和 iPad 的最佳 iOS 廣告封鎖程式。AdGuard 可以清除 Safari 中的各種廣告,保護個人隱私,並加快頁面載入速度。iOS 版 AdGuard 廣告封鎖技術確保最高質量的過濾,並讓使用者同時使用多個過濾器。
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AdGuard 內容阻擋器

AdGuard 內容阻擋器將消除在支援內容阻擋器技術之行動瀏覽器中的各種各類廣告 — 即 Samsung 網際網路和 Yandex.Browser。雖然比 AdGuard for Android 更受限制,但它是免費的,易於安裝並仍提供高廣告封鎖品質。
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AdGuard 瀏覽器擴充功能

AdGuard 是有效地封鎖於全部網頁上的所有類型廣告之最快的和最輕量的廣告封鎖擴充功能!為您使用的瀏覽器選擇 AdGuard,然後取得無廣告的、快速的和安全的瀏覽。
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AdGuard DNS 是一種不需要安裝任何的應用程式而封鎖網際網路廣告之極簡單的方式。它易於使用,完全地免費,被輕易地於任何的裝置上設置,並向您提供封鎖廣告、計數器、惡意網站和成人內容之最少必要的功能。
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AdGuard Home

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AdGuard Pro iOS 版

除了在 Safari 中之優秀的 iOS 廣告封鎖對普通版的用戶為已知的外,AdGuard Pro 提供很多功能。透過提供對自訂的 DNS 設定之存取,該應用程式允許您封鎖廣告、保護您的孩子免於線上成人內容並保護您個人的資料免於盜竊。
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自 Apple 開始強迫每位人使用該新的軟體開發套件(SDK)以來,用於 Safari 的廣告封鎖延伸功能處境艱難。AdGuard 延伸功能可以將高優質的廣告封鎖帶回 Safari。
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AdGuard Temp Mail

免費的臨時電子郵件地址產生器,保持匿名性並保護個人隱私。您的主收件匣中沒有垃圾郵件!
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AdGuard Android TV 版

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