This analysis describes what Ledger'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
The clause establishes both a user right to object and an unconditional commitment by Ledger to cease processing, with no stated exceptions or conditions.
Interpretive note: The excerpt states the stop-processing commitment without any stated conditions or exceptions. However, the two sentences may represent two related but independent propositions (the right to object, and the consequence of stopping). Both are closely linked and treated here as the primary claim together. It is also possible that conditions or exceptions exist elsewhere in the policy that are not captured in this excerpt.
The updated policy removes explicit language stating that Ledger Recover and Ledger Multisig services are excluded from this privacy policy. Previously, users were directed to separate privacy policies for those services; that direction is now absent. This creates ambiguity about whether this policy now covers those services or whether separate policies still apply. The dramatic reduction in policy length (from 224 to 36 sentences) suggests substantial content was removed, though the specific implications depend on what other sections were condensed or eliminated. You should review the full updated policy to confirm what data practices and service exclusions remain in effect for all Ledger services you use.
View change record →Ledger removed language explicitly stating that this privacy policy does not cover Ledger Recover and Ledger Multisig services, and eliminated references to dedicated privacy policies for those services. This creates ambiguity about whether those services are now governed by the main privacy policy or whether separate policies exist but are no longer disclosed in this document. If you use Ledger Recover or Ledger Multisig, you should review the privacy disclosures for those specific services directly, as it is no longer clear from the main privacy policy whether separate protections apply.
View change record →The reader may object to Ledger's processing of their data, and Ledger commits to stopping that processing.
How other platforms handle this
The right to know whether, and for what purposes, we process your Personal Data
The right to object to the processing of your Personal Data, as allowed by applicable law
the right to object to processing of your personal data, including profiling conducted on grounds of public or legitimate interest.
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"Object to the processing of your data. We will stop processing your data.— Excerpt from Ledger's Ledger Privacy Policy
Ad personalization controls removed. Contact scanning added. Advertiser data partnerships quietly dropped. A timeline of every change.
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The clause establishes both a user right to object and an unconditional commitment by Ledger to cease processing, with no stated exceptions or conditions.
The reader may object to Ledger's processing of their data, and Ledger commits to stopping that processing.
ConductAtlas has identified this type of provision across 290 platforms. See the full comparison.
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