This analysis describes what General Motors'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
Sharing driving and location data with an insurance entity is gated on affirmative consumer consent, meaning this disclosure cannot occur without an active, affirmative step by the consumer.
The updated statement narrowed its definition of personal information from 'identifies, relates to, or could reasonably be linked to you' to 'describes, relates to, or could reasonably be linked to you.' This language change affects which information GM must treat as personal information under the policy. The revised de-identification section reorganizes prior language, now stating GM 'may use technical measures to remove information that could reasonably identify you or your vehicle' and requires 'the same safeguards from any third parties we share it with.' The policy clarifies that its protections apply to personal information dealers disclose to GM, but do not cover dealers' independent data practices. Cruise is no longer listed as a GM affiliate exempt from this privacy statement, though the scope of privacy protections for Cruise users depends on whether Cruise now operates under this statement or maintains separate privacy terms.
View change record →Your driver behavior information and precise geolocation information will not be shared with General Motors Insurance unless you have affirmatively consented to that disclosure for usage-based insurance or rate-determination purposes.
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we may use, retain or share information with law enforcement or others in circumstances where a person's vital interests require protection, such as in the case of emergencies.
Any such de-identified genetic information and phenotypic information we share with third parties for research purposes is done in accordance with Part 46 (beginning with Section 46.101) of Title 45 of the Code of Federal Regulations.
By using one of these tools, you agree that Public.com may transfer that information to the applicable third party service.
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"General Motors Insurance when you have given your affirmative consent to disclose Driver Behavior Information or Precise Geolocation Information for usage-based insurance offers or to help determine your rate for an insurance quote or policy— Excerpt from General Motors's GM Privacy Statement
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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Sharing driving and location data with an insurance entity is gated on affirmative consumer consent, meaning this disclosure cannot occur without an active, affirmative step by the consumer.
Your driver behavior information and precise geolocation information will not be shared with General Motors Insurance unless you have affirmatively consented to that disclosure for usage-based insurance or rate-determination purposes.
ConductAtlas has identified this type of provision across 289 platforms. See the full comparison.
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