Compare data sharing governance provisions between Uber and DoorDash. Provisions are extracted from monitored governance documents and classified by severity.
The provision establishes the operational framework under which Uber transfers driver and delivery personnel data to external parties in the insurance and fleet management ecosystem. This data sharing structure supports insurance underwriting and claims administration processes while enabling fleet operators to access information about drivers operating under their fleet arrangements.
Consumer impact
Drivers and delivery personnel operating under this agreement authorize their personal data, including location history, performance ratings, and vehicle information, to be disclosed to insurance carriers and fleet operators as part of the service's standard operational procedures. The terms do not restrict which insurance partners or fleet operators may receive this data or establish contractual limitations on how those third parties may use the information.
Opt-out available
No opt-out available
Actual clause text
Uber shares personal data of drivers and delivery people with insurance partners to facilitate or assist with insurance coverage, claims processing, and underwriting. Uber also shares data with fleet partners, vehicle solution providers, and third-party transportation companies. This may include trip data, location data, vehicle information, performance data, and driver ratings. Fleet operators may receive information about drivers working under their fleet arrangements.
AI-extracted from source document. Verify against original for legal use.
The provision establishes a data-sharing practice that extends user information to external advertising technology providers for targeting and analytics purposes. This practice triggers disclosure obligations under state privacy statutes and defines the operational scope of third-party data access.
Consumer impact
Users' personal information, including precise location data and purchase history, is transmitted to advertising platforms and technology providers to enable targeted advertising. The terms apply this data-sharing practice upon continued use of the service unless a user exercises applicable privacy rights under their state law.
Opt-out available
No opt-out available
Actual clause text
We share personal information with third-party advertising partners including but not limited to Facebook, Google, TikTok, Snapchat, and other advertising technology providers. This sharing may include precise geolocation data, device identifiers, order history, and behavioral inferences derived from your use of our services. Such sharing may constitute a 'sale' or 'sharing' of personal information under applicable state privacy laws.
AI-extracted from source document. Verify against original for legal use.
DoorDash removed the header line identifying the document's country and language jurisdiction (Coun…
AI Difference AnalysisProfessional
Stripe's arbitration clause is narrower than Amazon's in one key respect: it includes a small claims court carve-out that Amazon's clause does not. PayPal's clause is the most aggressive of the three, explicitly waiving jury trial rights in addition to class action rights. From a compliance perspective, Amazon presents the lowest risk for B2B contracts while PayPal creates the highest exposure for consumer-facing applications subject to CFPB oversight.