Categories
Uncategorized

Snapchat’s Privacy Policy

Snapchat collects typical data that you provide them upfront, such as your name, username, password, email address, phone number, and date of birth. They can share information such as your name, username, Snapcode and profile pictures with their business partners and affiliates, as well. If you use “commerce services”, you may provide your credit or debit information and also the account connected. They also see our Snaps and Chats, so be cognizant that they can see everything we send. They collect data regarding how we interact with certain ads or filters, and any custom stickers that we make. They collect information about the device we use Snapchat on, such as what other apps we have installed, our IP address, network connections, and location. Even as I am viewing their privacy policy, they can access what websites I went to before and after theirs. They collect and disperse information about us between third parties and advertisers, as well. They basically use all this information to tailor ads to us specifically, and improve their services. They have a section in the policy that says that you may opt out of certain information services, but then say that you may use “full functionality” when you do this. 

Reading the privacy policy made me think back to the article read called “Policy Matter Now and in the Future”. One of the quoutes from this article particularly struck me: “Even as you read this, data about you is being collected, packaged, shipped and sold all over the world”. Everything we do online can be monitored and collected somehow, because of the fine-print of policies we agree to. Snapchat “collects, packages, and ships” our information to advertisers and business affiliates.

I interviewed my roommate about Snapchat’s privacy policy to get a teenager’s perspective on the use of our information.

"Ok, so I have here with me my roommate Laney, Laney do you use Snapchat?"

"Yes"

"And so, I had you read the privacy policy for Snapchat, right?"

"Yes"

"Did anything shock you when you read it?"

"Just that they could take information like after we're on the app, like from our phones"

"And did anything not surprise you? Like did you know Snapchat did any of this?"

"I kind of figured that they were using our information, I feel like a lot of social media websites do that, so that wasn't shocking, just that after we're on the app that they can track what we're doing"

"So they do lay out an option to opt out of certain information services, do you think you'll do this after reading the privacy policy?"

"Probably, I feel like it's a little bit of an invasion of privacy, though I know most social media websites probably do the same things"

"And do you think you'll change the things that you send over Snapchat after reading the privacy policy?"

"I don't really send anything over Snapchat that I really care if they see, so probably not."

"Ok, thank you!"

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S8755461511000673

https://www.snap.com/en-US/privacy/privacy-policy

 

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

css.php