Vast amounts of your personal data is finding its way into the hands of companies like Facebook and Google via third-party apps. Researchers at Oxford University looked into 959,000 third-party apps on the Google Play Store in the UK and US and discovered that 88% of them transfer data to Google parent company Alphabet.

According to the research, Facebook also receives third-party data from 43% of apps, with Twitter sucking up data from 34%, Verizon 26%, Microsoft 23% and Amazon just 18%.
These companies are collecting data relating to a user’s age, gender, location, and usage patterns, to name a few. It’s then used by these tech giants to develop extremely personalised profiles of users and their behaviour.
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“This enables construction of detailed profiles about individuals, which could include inferences about shopping habits, socio-economic class or likely political opinions. These profiles can then be used for a variety of purposes, from targeted advertising to credit scoring and targeted political campaign messages,” said researchers.
The data from apps is sent to tech companies via third-party trackers. The researchers found that many apps were targeted at children and gathering data from them. Revenues from online advertising are more than $59bn (£45bn) per year in the US alone, according to researchers.
“We find that most apps contain third-party tracking, and the distribution of trackers is long-tailed with several highly dominant trackers accounting for a large portion of the coverage,” the report said. “The extent of tracking also differs between categories of apps; in particular, news apps and apps targeted at children appear to be amongst the worst in terms of the number of third-party trackers associated with them. Third-party tracking is also revealed to be a highly trans-national phenomenon, with many trackers operating in jurisdictions outside the EU.”
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Researchers said that the findings suggested that “there are challenges ahead both for regulators aiming to enforce the law, and for companies who intend to comply with it”.
“Full audits of mobile app stores such as this could help regulators identify areas to focus on,” they added.
According to reports from Business Insider, a spokesperson for Google said that the data collected was used for “ordinary functions” such as information on an app crashing.
“We have clear policies and guidelines for how developers and third-party apps can handle data and we require developers to be transparent and ask for user permission. If an app violates our policies, we take action,” the spokesperson said.
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