Skip to main content

This app will help prevent Big Tech from tracking you

You have today more options than ever to limit how much data you concede on the seemingly free services by Facebook, Google, and others. These privacy options, however, are almost never enabled by default or explicitly recommended and are often buried deep inside menus — which means you may never discover them or be aware of how much of your sensitive information is being scooped up.

An app called Jumbo could be that missing, accessible link to these privacy controls, and its latest update could prove an even bigger nightmare for companies that furtively track what you do on your phone.

Doing your digital privacy chores

Jumbo acts as a sort of personal digital privacy assistant. The app can comb through your profiles, such as Facebook, and tell you where and how you can reduce what information you share, without the technical lingo. You can pick which trade-offs you’re comfortable with and instantly switch them off from the Jumbo app itself.

Jumbo privacy app homepage
Image used with permission by copyright holder

When I punched in my Facebook credentials, for instance, I found out that my relationship status and work history could be used by advertisers to target me. I was able to click the Stop Tracking button beneath these cards and shut that practice down. Another such recommendation informed me that my activity is being used to show me ads outside of Facebook as well.

“Facebook is for connecting people, not ads,” read a note at the bottom of the card.

Similarly, Jumbo can sift through the privacy settings of your Google and LinkedIn accounts. The way Jumbo accomplishes this is both creepy and clever. It’s not built with support from these tech giants, nor do they have official developer packages to enable such functionality. What Jumbo does is, when you sign in to your profiles, it crawls through websites on your behalf, and its automated bots replicate the process of manually clicking on settings to alter them.

Jumbo promises that it won’t misuse this access and says it’s not in the business of selling ads since its revenue stems from premium subscriptions.

“Our customers have already shown us that they are willing to pay for the additional privacy features our team will keep building, and most importantly to help us build a company that will never sell our users’ data,” the company said in a blog post.

“Your authentication information stays on your phone the whole time. In no event will we have access to your password on our cloud,” Jumbo’s CEO, Pierre Valade told Digital Trends.

Clean up your old posts

Jumbo’s other highlight is its ability to clean up your social profiles and digital footprint. The app can quickly help you take down old tweets or archive Instagram pictures you now find yourself cringing at. This feature works across services. You can plug in your Amazon account to delete Alexa voice recordings or your Google account for purging your YouTube searches, location data from Maps, and more.

The process remains identical. You add your profile, select the time period, and Jumbo takes care of the rest depending on the quantity of data. Jumbo also lets you save those tweets or pictures locally on your phone before you boot them off the internet forever. The company will soon add options for cloud storage, like Dropbox, as well.

Block third-party tracking

What truly sets Jumbo apart, however, is its built-in third-party blocker. On your phone, Jumbo can prevent trackers from actively prying into each and every one of your moves. Most apps come packaged and teeming with these trackers that can you follow you around. Trackers don’t usually come under the purview of privacy settings and even the most data-frugal and vigilant users can fall prey to them.

Jumbo’s newest update allows you to block more than 400 major trackers. To do this, the app, through your phone’s local VPN function, monitors your network traffic and if it detects a tracker that’s present on its list, it cuts it off.

Limitations

Jumbo offers what tech companies should have baked into their platforms in the first place — if they had been committed to preserving user privacy. The app presents how a service is siphoning up your personal data front and center — accompanied by straightforward tools to terminate any practice you’re not comfortable with.

However, since it’s not supported by tech companies, Jumbo’s future largely hinges on whether it is continued to be allowed to crawl these services to edit privacy settings on your behalf. Because of that restriction, Jumbo already falls short when it comes to how much it can do on sites other than LinkedIn, Google, and Facebook. It can’t, for instance, help you secure your Twitter or Instagram profile. Nevertheless, given its current capabilities, Jumbo is a no-brainer and deserves a place on your phone especially for banning third-party trackers.

As for revenue, Jumbo is today also raising $8 million in fresh funding and Valade tells me it needs about 100,000 subscribers to remain profitable. At the moment, it hosts over 60,000 monthly active users.

Most of Jumbo’s features are available for free. But a few premium tools like third-party tracker blocking and Instagram scanning are locked in behind a subscription that starts at $2.99.

Editors' Recommendations

Shubham Agarwal
Shubham Agarwal is a freelance technology journalist from Ahmedabad, India. His work has previously appeared in Firstpost…
Google Messages vs. Samsung Messages: Which app should you use?
Google messages versus samsung messages app icons side by side on Galaxy Z Fold 5.

Amid the rise of third-party messaging apps, texting remains a popular means of messaging in the U.S. If you own an Android phone, you've likely used or heard of Google Messages, which is positioned as the default text messaging app for Android. It is the culmination of Google's long history with multiple messaging platforms. Google has pursued smartphone companies to use its Dialer and Messages apps as their default since at least 2017 and now mandates them to use Google Messages as the default messaging app on all devices.

Meanwhile, if you have been a Samsung user in the past, you have likely also known and experienced the Samsung Messages app, which comes preinstalled on all Samsung phones and cannot be uninstalled. This is despite losing its spot as the default messaging app on Samsung Galaxy smartphones.

Read more
No, the Journal app on your iPhone isn’t spying on you
Apple Journal app on an iPhone 15 Pro.

If you've spent any time on Facebook, TikTok, or any other social media site over the last couple of days, there's a chance you've seen people claiming that your iPhone is spying on you — specifically, with a feature called "Journaling Suggestions."

One post I stumbled across on Facebook made it sound rather frightening, warning me that the feature shares my FULL NAME and EXACTLY where I'm located to anyone nearby. The post told me to go and toggle the setting off immediately because it was "Very scary stuff!!"

Read more
7 hidden iMessage features you need to be using
hidden iMessage features.

Apple's iMessage is a widely used messaging app with over 1 billion active users. It was launched in 2011 and is deeply integrated into Apple devices, allowing iPhone, iPad, and Mac users to exchange text messages, photos, videos, and more seamlessly across platforms.

Over the years, Apple has introduced many new features to the Messages app. You probably use some of them every day, but others are easy to overlook and forget about it. Below are a few of our favorite hidden iMessage features — and ones you should be using if you aren't already.
Pinning messages

Read more