Newstral
Article
The Verge on 2022-05-02 10:00
Mental health apps have terrible privacy protections, report finds
Related news
- Period and pregnancy tracking apps have bad privacy protections, report findsThe Verge
- 'Creepy' Mental Health And Prayer Apps Are Sharing Your Personal DataForbes
- Mental health apps may put your privacy at risk. Here’s what to look forMerced Sun-Star
- THow helpful are mental health apps?theweek.com
- Mental health app privacy language opens up holes for user dataThe Verge
- Global Privacy Sweep Finds Privacy Issues in Children’s Appsjdsupra.com
- Therapy apps are still failing their privacy checkupsThe Verge
- Most apps don't care about privacy, CMU study findspost-gazette.com
- Mark Zuckerberg questioned by senators over children’s privacy protections in new letterThe Verge
- CCBDCs Like a Digital Dollar Face Doubts Without Privacy Protections, Key Organization Findscoindesk.com
- Third-party health apps are vulnerable to hacks, report findsThe Verge
- Apple’s privacy labels are coming to all apps, including its ownThe Verge
- Apple will soon require all App Store apps to have a privacy policyThe Verge
- COVID-19 apps pose privacy risks to users worldwide, investigation findsFox News
- Kid-friendly websites, mobile apps often putting children’s privacy at risk, probe findsThe Globe and Mail
- Privacy protections strengthen the internetbangordailynews.com
- Lawmakers seek internet privacy protectionskentucky.com
- Mozilla says “most top apps” on Android have misleading privacy labelsArs Technica