What are your dating and fitness apps sharing about you? - Action News
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What are your dating and fitness apps sharing about you?

Is your dating app sharing your sexual preference with marketers? Is your fitness tracker monitoring your location when you're not working out? A new online tool makes it a little easier for you to find out.

A newly expanded website makes it easier for consumers to track information gathered by common apps

Access My Info is a tool that helps people request the kinds of personal information companies might have about them, including details about personality traits, sexual preferences and dating history. (CBC)

Is your datingapp sharing your sexual habits with marketers? Is your fitness tracker monitoring your location when you're not working out?

There's an online toolmakingit a little easier for you to find out.

Access My Info Canada is a website that allows consumers to easily contact companies that make fitness trackers, telecommunications tools and dating applications, along with the government of Canada, to askwhat kinds of data they're collecting and with whom they may be sharing it.

The website helps customers better understand how their information is being used, says Andrew Hilts. (CBC)

"This can help people answer questions if they've ever wondered if their cellphone provider is logging their location, or if their online dating app is ever sharing their sexual preferences," says Andrew Hilts, whodeveloped the tool in collaboration with Citizen Lab, a researchinstitute focused on human rights and digital technologybased at the University of Toronto.

The website first launched in 2014, with a specific focus on telecommunications.Hilts decided to create the expanded version being released today afterrequesting information from fitness apps for a different project, witheye-opening results: he found, for example, that some companies were tracking users' locations even when they weren't working out.

Your weight? Your dating history?

The tool is designed to help consumers take advantage of their rights under Canadian privacy laws, which allow them to access and correct any personal informationheld by Canadian organizations or organizations that do business in Canada.

"We don't think many people know about this right," says Hilts, who is also theexecutive director of Open Effect, a non-profitthatresearches privacy and security issues.

It was only while working on another project that Hilts discovered that some fitness apps were logging users' location even when they weren't working out. (Bebeto Matthews/Associated Press)

The tool automatically helps people generaterequests for theinformationcompanies might have about them includingpersonality traits, sexual preferences and dating history in the case of dating apps, or information about diet and weight in the case of fitness apps and provides direct contact information for those companies' privacy officers.

While companies theoretically tell people what kind of information they're collecting in their privacy policies, those policies tend to be vague, Hilts says.

"There's lots of uses of the words like 'may' and 'could' and as a result customers are probably more confused after reading the policy than before."

Data breach risks

Giving customers access to this informationcan be vital:it helps them understand what details may be made publicif there's a data breach at a particular company, anddecide whether or not to do business withcompaniesbased on their privacy practices and the data they gather.

Hilts also hopes that it will help show companies that Canadian customers care about privacy, encourage them to provide customers with better access to their own information, and make them keep better track of what information they're collecting and why.

Knowing what information companies have about them lets customers understand the consequences in case that information is ever made public. Ashley Madison, a site for extramarital dating, had a huge data breach in 2015. (Chris Wattie/Reuters)

Hilts said the telecom tool has led toa number of positive changes. Internet service providerTeksavvy has announcedthat, as a result of requests made via Access My Info, it hastaken steps to minimize the personal data it collects. The website's creatorshave also noticedthat Rogers hasimproved the way it responded to information requests, such as clarifying whetherit candisclose to customers that law enforcement had requested their data.

Because the expanded version of the website involves new industries and sectors, even its creators aren't sure exactly what information customers will get back, or whether the companies will respond at all. However, they have somerecommendations for what to do if you don't get a satisfactory answer in response to your request, such as reminding companiesthat you have a right to complain to Canada's privacy commissioner ifthey don't fulfil their disclosure obligations.

The latest updates to the tool were funded by the Canadian Internet Registration Authority's community investment program.