Skip to main content

Twitter’s updated privacy policy sheds light on just what happens to your data

Twitter rolled out an updated privacy policy on Tuesday, with less legalese and a simpler format to help clarify how the platform uses data. The change, prompted in part by the upcoming General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) laws in the European Union, is designed to make the company’s policies easier to understand. While the laws are only in the EU, Twitter says that the privacy settings and privacy policy update applies worldwide.

“Twitter’s purpose is to keep the world informed by serving the public conversation,” Damien Kieran, Twitter’s data protection officer, wrote in a blog post. “We work hard to build a great experience for people tweeting, and seeing tweets all over the world, and protecting the privacy of the people who use Twitter every day. We believe you should know the types of data you share with us and how we use it. Most importantly, you should have meaningful control over both.”

The new policy revises content to use clearer language, Twitter says. Part of making that language easier to understand includes highlighted phrases with hover-over definitions.

Take Direct Messages, for example. Twitter’s new policy says that for those, “we will store and process your communication and information related to them. This includes link scanning for malicious content, link shortening to http://t.co URLs, detection of spam and prohibited images, and review of reported issues.” The policy doesn’t appear to change Twitter’s approach to Direct Messages, but spells out what the company does with them — the current version of the privacy policy stops at storing and processing and doesn’t go into detail exactly what that entails.

The updated policy is redesigned to include several different sections, with a navigation section on the left of each section to look for a specific topic. The design is optimized for both desktop and mobile browsers, as well as including a downloadable plain text version. 

Twitter is also inviting questions and comments on the new policy, with contact information directly inside the policy. Notably, Twitter includes contact information for U.S. users that aren’t required to be assisted under the GDPR’s mandated data protection officer.

The updated policy also includes links to the related privacy tools directly inside the document.

The new policy will go into effect on May 25, the first day of the GDPR regulation. Users worldwide will have access to the same tools and will see the same privacy policy. Twitter users in the European Union will see a prompt when those new policies are in effect and will also be asked to review their current privacy settings.

Editors' Recommendations

Hillary K. Grigonis
Hillary never planned on becoming a photographer—and then she was handed a camera at her first writing job and she's been…
The Off-Facebook Activity tool lets you take control of your shared data
fbi wants social media data facebook app mem2

Facebook is hoping to be more transparent about your data and activity by expanding a new privacy feature to the U.S. and the rest of the world. 

The new feature is called the Off-Facebook Activity tool, which was previously only available to people in Spain, Ireland, and South Korea. Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg announced the worldwide feature rollout on Tuesday, January 28, which is appropriately Data Privacy Day. 

Read more
Would you trust Verizon’s new privacy-focused OneSearch to protect your data?
OneSearch

Verizon is looking to put some major security breaches behind it with a brand-new, privacy-focused platform called OneSearch. Built on a model that involves encrypting search terms, leaving results unfiltered, and not storing or transferring of any user information whatsoever, it's going after the privacy-conscious web users of the world.

In 2020, the search engine market is both hotly competitive and not even remotely so. Google controls almost 93% of all searches, with Bing, Yahoo, Baidu, Yandex, and everyone else battling it out for scant shares of the remainder. Some of those, like DuckDuckGo, Qwant, and StartPage, hope to attract an audience by putting privacy first. They don't track users, don't sell their data, and don't filter search results. Those are all features of Verizon's new OneSearch platform as well, but it's hoping that its polished product, and a few more features, will be enough to draw the privacy conscious away from their established searching patterns.

Read more
Update your Twitter app right now if you’re on Android
Hand holding a Twitter phone

Twitter says it has patched a vulnerability inside its Android app that could have potentially let malicious actors view information of private accounts and take over profiles through an intricate back-end process. If a hacker managed to exploit the loophole, they could send direct messages and tweets on the target account’s behalf.

The social network claims so far it hasn’t discovered any affected user, nor found evidence of whether a third-party service has taken advantage of the bug. However, Twitter is reaching out to the people whose details may have been exposed. It’s unclear how long the vulnerability was left out in the open. The issue is not present on Twitter’s iOS app.

Read more