Some Popular Android Apps Still Share User Personal Data With Facebook
Dhir Acharya
Popular apps were sharing its user data with Facebook automatically, even when they don’t use the social network or have logged out of its platform.
- Instagram Launches A Lite Version For Users In Rural And Remote Areas
- Australia Passed New Law That Requires Facebook And Google To Pay For News Content
- Facebook Stops Showing Australian Content, Even From Government Sites
On Tuesday, Privacy International – a UK watchdog group – said that some Android apps have no longer shared its data with Facebook, but others still do.
In December, German mobile security firm Mobilsicher and Privacy International released reports saying that lots of widely used apps were sharing its user data with Facebook automatically, even when they don’t use the social network or have logged out of its platform. They both examined several iOS apps.
According to the London charity, Duolingo, Yelp, the King James Bible, Indeed, Muslim Pro, and Qibla Connect still share data without permission. Meanwhile, Privacy International’s report indicates that Kayak, Skyscanner, and Spotify have updated their apps to block connection with Facebook when users open the apps.
Not only did the watchdog report this issue to the European Data Protection Supervisor and the European Data Protection Board, but it also reached to the apps. Duolingo promised to remove the app events feature of the Facebook Software Developer Kit from its iOS an Android app versions in its next update. The app also thanked Privacy International for acknowledging them of the issue.
Meanwhile, Yelp denied sharing user personal information from its Android apps with the social network. According to an email from Yelp, it runs ad campaigns for its apps on the social network, which means when users launch the app, it may send an anonymous advertising ID of the device to Facebook. Yelp wrote that the use is included in its Privacy Policy which users can go to Android settings to deny access to the advertising ID whenever they want.
In Facebook policies, the social network says that it can collect information on users through third-party apps using SDKs and APIs. Apps that are integrated with SDK offer features such as analytics or allowance of login with Facebook.
The other apps didn’t respond immediately to comment requests and neither did Facebook.
Featured Stories
ICT News - Feb 18, 2026
Google's Project Toscana: Elevating Pixel Face Unlock to Rival Apple's Face ID
Mobile - Feb 16, 2026
Xiaomi Launches Affordable Tracker to Compete with Apple's AirTag
ICT News - Feb 15, 2026
X Platform Poised to Introduce In-App Crypto and Stock Trading Soon
ICT News - Feb 13, 2026
Elon Musk Pivots: SpaceX Prioritizes Lunar Metropolis Over Martian Colony
ICT News - Feb 10, 2026
Discord's Teen Safety Sham: Why This Data Leak Magnet Isn't Worth Your Trust...
ICT News - Feb 09, 2026
PS6 Rumors: Game-Changing Specs Poised to Transform Console Play
ICT News - Feb 08, 2026
Is Elon Musk on the Path to Becoming the World's First Trillionaire?
ICT News - Feb 07, 2026
NVIDIA's Gaming GPU Drought: No New Releases in 2026 as AI Takes Priority
ICT News - Feb 06, 2026
Elon Musk Clarifies: No Starlink Phone in Development at SpaceX
ICT News - Feb 03, 2026
Elon Musk's SpaceX Acquires xAI in Landmark $1.25 Trillion Merger
Read More
Mobile- Feb 16, 2026
Xiaomi Launches Affordable Tracker to Compete with Apple's AirTag
For users tired of ecosystem lock-in or high prices, the Xiaomi Tag represents a compelling, no-frills option that delivers core functionality at a fraction of the cost.
ICT News- Feb 18, 2026
Google's Project Toscana: Elevating Pixel Face Unlock to Rival Apple's Face ID
As the smartphone landscape evolves, Google's push toward superior face unlock technology underscores its ambition to close the gap with Apple in user security and convenience.
Mobile- Feb 17, 2026
Anticipating the Samsung Galaxy S26 and S26+: Key Rumors and Specs
The Samsung Galaxy S26 series is on the horizon, sparking excitement among tech enthusiasts.