Uber shares your trip data, location, ratings, and performance information with insurance companies and fleet operators — meaning companies you may not have a direct relationship with can access detailed records of your driving activity.
Your driving behavior, ratings, trip history, and location data are shared with insurance companies and fleet operators without requiring your individual consent for each disclosure, which can influence your insurance costs and your standing with fleet operators who manage your access to work.
How other platforms handle this
Your personal information may be transferred to, processed and stored in countries other than the country in which you are resident, including the United States, Australia, Canada, the European Union and the UK. We take appropriate safeguards to protect your personal information in accordance with t...
Your Personal Data may be transferred to and stored by us in the United States and by our affiliates and third-parties listed in Section 6 above. Therefore, your Personal Data may be processed and stored outside your country or jurisdiction, including in places that are not subject to an adequacy de...
We may share your information with third parties to support, improve, promote, and secure the Services; process payments; or fulfill orders. These service providers only have access to the information necessary to perform specified functions on our behalf. We require them to protect and secure your ...
Sharing performance and behavioral data with insurers and fleet operators can affect your insurance premiums, eligibility for coverage, and your relationship with fleet operators who may use this data to make employment-like decisions about you.
REGULATORY FRAMEWORK: Third-party data sharing with insurers implicates GDPR Art. 6 (lawful basis) and Art. 13 (transparency obligations requiring identification of recipients or categories of recipients); CCPA/CPRA §1798.115 (right to know categories of third parties with whom data is shared); UK GDPR equivalent provisions; and potentially the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (GLBA 15 U.S.C. §6802) if insurance data sharing constitutes financial data processing. State insurance privacy regulations (e.g., California Insurance Code §§791-791.27, NAIC model regulations) may impose additional disclosure obligations.
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Your genetic data may be transferred to a new owner as a business asset. Here is what the Terms of Service actually say and what you can do right now.