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TechGoogle

Google will make Android apps tell users about data collection in transparency push

By
Nico Grant
Nico Grant
and
Bloomberg
Bloomberg
Down Arrow Button Icon
By
Nico Grant
Nico Grant
and
Bloomberg
Bloomberg
Down Arrow Button Icon
May 6, 2021, 3:05 PM ET
Beginning in 2022, Android users can view how mobile apps collect their information.
Beginning in 2022, Android users can view how mobile apps collect their information. Igor Golovniov/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images

Google said it will create a new safety section in its Play mobile-app store that will let Android smartphone users see what data developers collect about them and share, plus give access to additional privacy and security information.

Android app developers have until the second quarter of 2022 to declare this information, the Alphabet Inc. unit said Thursday in a blog post. Users will begin seeing the safety section in Google Play sometime in the first three months of 2022.

The transparency push echoes rival Apple Inc.’s decision in 2020 to compel app-makers to disclose what information they gather, and what they do with it. Apple’s latest mobile software update, iOS 14.5, includes an App Tracking Transparency feature, which requires users to opt in to being tracked by apps for personalized advertising. Developers expect to lose revenue from this change because most consumers won’t agree to have their data collected.

Google, which itself is dependent on advertising revenue, has taken a more measured approach. The internet search giant is discussing how it can limit data collection and cross-app tracking on the Android operating system in a way that is less stringent than Apple’s solution, Bloomberg has reported.

The Google Play safety section will also tell users if an app encrypts data, if it follows Google’s policies for families and children, whether users have a choice in sharing information, and whether users can request data deletion if they uninstall an app.

—With assistance from Mark Gurman.

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