Newstral
Article
Ars Technica on 2023-02-23 19:10
Mozilla says “most top apps” on Android have misleading privacy labels
Related news
- Mozilla study lambasts Google over ‘misleading’ privacy labels on top Android appsThe Verge
- Google is launching iOS-style privacy labels for Android apps next yearthenextweb.com
- Apple will require apps to add privacy ‘nutrition labels’ starting December 8thThe Verge
- Apple’s privacy labels are coming to all apps, including its ownThe Verge
- Weeks later, Google still hasn’t added privacy labels to its most popular iPhone appsThe Verge
- Apple launches new App Store privacy labels so you can see how iOS apps use your dataThe Verge
- “Privacy Nutrition Labels” in Apple’s App Storeschneier.com
- Apple bans misleading apps on iOSengadget
- Mozilla And Cloudflare Join Forces To Boost Firefox Browser PrivacyForbes
- Mozilla stops Facebook ads amid data privacy concernsinfowars.com
- Connected cars are a “privacy nightmare,” Mozilla Foundation saysArs Technica
- Comparing Android & Apple’s Exclusive Appscascadebusnews.com
- What We Learned From Apple’s New Privacy LabelsThe New York Times
- What we learned from Apple’s new privacy labelsThe New York Times
- 10 Thoughts Regarding Apple’s New “Privacy Nutrition Labels”jdsupra.com
- Apple Privacy Nutrition Labels Effective Starting Next Monthjdsupra.com
- WhatsApp criticizes Apple’s new app privacy labels over iMessage inconsistencyThe Verge
- WhatsApp accuses Apple of double standard on data privacy labelsengadget
- DuckDuckGo Attacks Google for 'Spying' After Apple Launches Privacy Labelsbreitbart.com
- Google Play gets mandatory app privacy labels in April 2022Ars Technica