Provision Registry

3351 classified provisions across 299 platforms — browse, filter, and compare.

Every clause classified by type, severity, and platform. Updated as policies change.

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Filtering: Privacy rights × Clear all
Tinder · Tinder Privacy Policy
On a dating app where users share sensitive information about their identity, location, and relationships, the circumstances under which this data may be disclosed to government authorities are particularly significant, especially for users in jurisdictions where LGBTQ+ status or relationship configurations could create legal risk.
CA-P-010161 First tracked May 11, 2026 Last seen May 22, 2026 Compare across platforms →
Binance.US · Binance.US Privacy Policy
As a regulated money services business subject to Bank Secrecy Act requirements, Binance.US is legally obligated to file Suspicious Activity Reports and Currency Transaction Reports and to respond to lawful subpoenas and government orders. Users should understand that their transaction history, identity data, and account information may be disclosed to government authorities.
CA-P-008368 First tracked May 10, 2026 Last seen May 22, 2026 Compare across platforms →
Uber · Uber Privacy Notice
This provision authorizes disclosure of driver data including background check results, location history, communications, and financial data to government authorities, which is operationally significant for drivers in jurisdictions with active regulatory scrutiny of gig worker classification and for those operating in countries with broad government access powers.
CA-P-002471 First tracked Apr 9, 2026 Last seen May 22, 2026 Compare across platforms →
Amazon · AWS Acceptable Use Policy
This clause establishes that AWS may disclose customer account information and activity data to law enforcement authorities based on its own determination that criminal activity may have occurred, independent of formal legal process being served.
CA-P-010909 First tracked May 12, 2026 Last seen May 22, 2026 Compare across platforms →
X · X Rules and Policies
The existence of formal law enforcement guidelines means X has documented procedures for disclosing user data to government authorities, which is relevant to any user's understanding of when their account information may be shared outside of X.
CA-P-010874 First tracked May 12, 2026 Last seen May 22, 2026 Compare across platforms →
medium Privacy rights
Telegram · Telegram Privacy Policy
This provision defines the scope of data Telegram commits to disclosing under law enforcement orders as limited to IP address and phone number, and conditions disclosure on both a valid judicial order and a Terms of Service violation finding. The quarterly transparency reporting mechanism provides a public audit trail of disclosure events.
CA-P-002908 First tracked Apr 18, 2026 Last seen May 22, 2026 Compare across platforms →
Telegram · Telegram Privacy Policy
This provision defines the conditions under which Telegram will identify users to authorities, which is directly relevant to users' expectations of anonymity on the platform.
CA-P-007305 First tracked May 9, 2026 Last seen May 20, 2026 Compare across platforms →
Uniswap · Uniswap Privacy Policy
In a crypto context, disclosure of wallet address combined with IP address to law enforcement could expose your transaction history on the blockchain to investigation without a specific court order being required under the policy's own terms.
CA-P-008144 First tracked May 10, 2026 Last seen May 22, 2026 Compare across platforms →
Tabnine · Tabnine Privacy Policy
The policy relies on legitimate interests as a lawful basis for product improvement, analytics, and marketing processing, which means consent is not sought for these activities; EU users retain the right to object to processing on this basis.
CA-P-011751 First tracked May 12, 2026 Last seen May 20, 2026 Compare across platforms →
Ledger · Ledger Privacy Policy
The legal basis used for each processing activity determines what rights users can exercise and whether they can object to or stop that processing; reliance on legitimate interests rather than consent means some processing may occur without an active opt-in.
CA-P-008449 First tracked May 10, 2026 Last seen May 22, 2026 Compare across platforms →
Zoom · Zoom Privacy Statement
This provision establishes that Zoom may share user data including meeting content with law enforcement in response to legal process or in Zoom's assessment of necessity for safety purposes. The scope of Zoom's discretionary disclosure authority and any transparency reporting practices are relevant to enterprise and institutional risk assessments.
CA-P-012538 First tracked May 20, 2026 Last seen May 22, 2026 Compare across platforms →
GitHub · GitHub Privacy Statement
The policy authorizes disclosure to law enforcement and government agencies under legal compulsion and also in circumstances where GitHub determines disclosure is necessary to protect rights or safety, with user notification described as conditional on legal permissibility.
CA-P-011305 First tracked May 12, 2026 Last seen May 22, 2026 Compare across platforms →
Cloudflare · Cloudflare Privacy Policy
This provision means your IP address, account data, and traffic logs could be disclosed to government or law enforcement agencies in response to legal process, which is particularly relevant given that Cloudflare handles infrastructure data for a large portion of global internet traffic.
CA-P-007416 First tracked May 9, 2026 Last seen May 22, 2026 Compare across platforms →
WhatsApp · WhatsApp Privacy Policy
The policy authorizes disclosure of user information in response to government requests and legal process, including on a good-faith basis, which means data may be shared without a court order in some circumstances as WhatsApp interprets applicable law.
CA-P-011432 First tracked May 12, 2026 Last seen May 22, 2026 Compare across platforms →
Oura · Oura Privacy Policy
This provision applies the legitimate interest basis to processing that includes health-adjacent data (service improvement involving sleep and readiness data), which EU supervisory authorities may scrutinize given the sensitivity of the underlying data and the availability of consent as an alternative basis. The policy does not provide a publicly disclosed legitimate interest assessment.
CA-P-012696 First tracked May 21, 2026 Last seen May 22, 2026 Compare across platforms →
Klarna · Klarna Privacy Policy
Using legitimate interest rather than consent as a legal basis means Klarna does not need to ask your permission for certain profiling and marketing activities, though you retain the right to object, which may not be prominently communicated in the user experience.
CA-P-009283 First tracked May 10, 2026 Last seen May 22, 2026 Compare across platforms →
Oura · Oura Privacy Policy
Legitimate interest as a lawful basis for marketing-related processing means Oura may use your data for these purposes without a separate consent prompt, though you have the right to object to this processing under GDPR.
CA-P-007772 First tracked May 9, 2026 Last seen May 20, 2026 Compare across platforms →
HubSpot · HubSpot Privacy Policy
Legitimate interests is a flexible legal basis that does not require your consent but is subject to a balancing test. Individuals in the EU and UK have the right to object to processing based on legitimate interests.
CA-P-009805 First tracked May 10, 2026 Last seen May 20, 2026 Compare across platforms →
Adobe · Adobe Privacy Policy
This is a broad assertion that allows Adobe to process your data for marketing and sharing purposes by default, without your explicit consent, in jurisdictions where this basis is available. Users who wish to stop this processing must actively exercise their right to object.
CA-P-008258 First tracked May 10, 2026 Last seen May 22, 2026 Compare across platforms →
Monday.com · Monday.com Privacy Policy
This clause establishes the legal foundation for data processing activities that do not require explicit user consent under GDPR. It permits the entity to conduct processing for operational and business purposes while maintaining that data subjects retain the ability to object where their rights outweigh the stated interests.
CA-P-005665 First tracked May 7, 2026 Last seen May 7, 2026 Compare across platforms →
medium Privacy rights
Palantir · Palantir Privacy Statement
Legitimate interests is a flexible but contestable lawful basis; individuals in the EU and UK have the right to object to processing conducted on this basis, and Palantir must stop if it cannot demonstrate compelling grounds that override those interests.
CA-P-009643 First tracked May 10, 2026 Last seen May 22, 2026 Compare across platforms →
Calendly · Calendly Privacy Notice
Legitimate interests is a flexible legal basis that does not require user consent, but under GDPR users have the right to object to processing based on legitimate interests, which Calendly must honor.
CA-P-009710 First tracked May 10, 2026 Last seen May 22, 2026 Compare across platforms →
medium Privacy rights
Klarna · Klarna Privacy Policy
Legitimate interests is one of several legal bases that permits data processing without explicit user consent. This authorization enables Klarna to conduct certain processing activities—such as fraud prevention, analytics, or service optimization—based on institutional determinations of proportionality rather than affirmative user permission.
CA-P-000923 First tracked Apr 3, 2026 Last seen Apr 10, 2026 Compare across platforms →
medium Privacy rights
Checkout.com · Checkout.com Privacy
Legitimate interests is a flexible but contested legal basis under GDPR; individuals have the right to object to processing on this basis, and Checkout.com must stop unless it can demonstrate compelling grounds that override the individual's interests.
CA-P-010387 First tracked May 11, 2026 Last seen May 22, 2026 Compare across platforms →
Stripe · Stripe Privacy Policy
Reliance on legitimate interests as a processing basis under GDPR requires a balancing test against data subject rights and interests; the policy directs users to the Privacy Center for specifics, meaning the legal basis documentation is distributed across multiple documents rather than consolidated in this policy.
CA-P-012530 First tracked May 20, 2026 Last seen May 22, 2026 Compare across platforms →
Databricks · Databricks Privacy Notice
This provision establishes the institutional framework for personal data processing activities that do not require explicit consent. By relying on legitimate interests as a legal basis, Databricks can conduct specified processing operations according to GDPR Article 6(1)(f) standards, subject to balancing tests between organizational and individual interests.
CA-P-004411 First tracked Apr 30, 2026 Last seen Apr 30, 2026 Compare across platforms →
Adyen · Adyen Privacy Policy
Legitimate interests is a flexible legal basis that does not require your consent, meaning Adyen can process your data for analytics and product improvement without asking you, though you have the right to object to such processing.
CA-P-008768 First tracked May 10, 2026 Last seen May 22, 2026 Compare across platforms →
Telegram · Telegram Privacy Policy
Relying on legitimate interests rather than consent means Telegram does not need to ask your permission to collect and process data, though you have the right to object to such processing under GDPR.
CA-P-007307 First tracked May 9, 2026 Last seen May 20, 2026 Compare across platforms →
Skillshare · Skillshare Privacy Policy
Legitimate interests is a flexible legal basis that does not require user consent, and its application to marketing and corporate transaction purposes may be subject to challenge under GDPR if the balancing test does not adequately weigh user privacy interests against Skillshare's business interests.
CA-P-010479 First tracked May 11, 2026 Last seen May 20, 2026 Compare across platforms →
Chime · Chime Privacy Policy
The provision establishes a default sharing authorization for non-affiliated marketing purposes, with the operational significance that data sharing occurs unless the customer exercises the available opt-out procedure. This structure places the burden on customers to affirmatively restrict the sharing practice.
CA-P-006622 First tracked May 8, 2026 Last seen May 8, 2026 Compare across platforms →

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