This analysis describes what Fitbit's agreement states, permits, or reserves. It does not constitute a legal determination about enforceability. Regulatory applicability and practical outcomes may vary by jurisdiction, enforcement context, and individual circumstances. Read our methodology
This clause identifies circumstances under which Fitbit may disclose user information to third parties—including governments—without the user's consent, covering a broad range of legal and law-enforcement scenarios.
Interpretive note: The excerpt is truncated with '...'; there may be additional grounds for disclosure not captured here.
The reader's information may be preserved or disclosed by Fitbit without the reader's consent in legal, regulatory, or law-enforcement contexts.
How other platforms handle this
disclosure is required by a third-party to complete a transaction initiated by the user
If we're involved in a reorganization, merger, acquisition, sale of some or all of our assets or other business transaction, depending on the circumstances, we may disclose any of the information described in Section 2 above...
We will disclose information to third parties about your account or the transfers you make: (i) where it is necessary for completing transfers, or (ii) in order to verify the existence and condition of your account...
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Fitbit has changed this document before.
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"We may preserve or disclose information about you to comply with a law, regulation, legal process, or governmental request; to assert legal rights or defend against legal claims; or to prevent, detect, or investigate illegal activity...— Excerpt from Fitbit's Fitbit Privacy Policy
ConductAtlas detected a major restructuring of Meta’s privacy policy that removed detailed consumer rights disclosures and relocated them to separate documents.
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This clause identifies circumstances under which Fitbit may disclose user information to third parties—including governments—without the user's consent, covering a broad range of legal and law-enforcement scenarios.
The reader's information may be preserved or disclosed by Fitbit without the reader's consent in legal, regulatory, or law-enforcement contexts.
ConductAtlas has identified this type of provision across 289 platforms. See the full comparison.
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