USA Today reported yesterday that the Facebook version of Angry Birds had a flunking score of 65 in terms of respecting usersā privacy, according to a group called PrivacyChoice
Today?
PrivacyChoice gives the same app a glowing 89 (check it yourself). The Angry Birds folks āamended their policy, as did one of the companies collecting data on their site,ā PrivacyScoreās Jim Brock told Kotaku. Weāve got a follow-up in to him to find out what was changed. Weāve also asked Angry Birds studio Rovio whatās up.
PrivacyChoice reports that Playdomās and EAās apps are better at respecting privacy than rival Zyngaās. Companies get lower scores, Brock told Kotaku, due to āa relative lack of protective provisions, like ensuring that personal data is deleted after account termination, and second, more extensive tracking by ad companies that have low privacy qualifications (like not participating in industry oversight programs).ā He declined to compare the specific privacy policies of gaming companies EA and Zynga.
The images in this post are from PrivacyScore.com.