What they're not telling you: submitted by

Marcus Webb
The Take
Marcus Webb · Surveillance & Tech Privacy

# THE TAKE: Android's privacy-through-noise-f-droid-free-and-open-source-android-app-repository.html" title="Fauxx - Privacy Through Noise | F-Droid - Free and Open Source Android App Repository" style="color:#1a1a1a;text-decoration:underline;text-decoration-style:dotted;font-weight:500;">privacy-policies.html" title="67% of Android apps log data not mentioned in their privacy policies" style="color:#1a1a1a;text-decoration:underline;text-decoration-style:dotted;font-weight:500;">Privacy Theater The 67% figure is misleading theater. These apps aren't operating in legal gray zones—they're executing standard industry practice documented in *undisclosed* secondary policies, SDK agreements, and terms buried three clicks deep. Google's Play Store disclosure requirements are performative. Apps declare primary data collection while analytics SDKs (Firebase, Mixpanel, Amplitude) operate independently, creating deliberate architectural plausible deniability. The vendor isn't technically *lying*—the developer genuinely doesn't know what third-party code harvests. This isn't negligence. It's intentional fragmentation of responsibility. When pressed, companies cite "transparency complexity" rather than admitting they've systematized opacity. The real story: Android's permission model succeeded as security theater while failing as privacy infrastructure. Users got granular toggles. Advertisers got everything else. Nothing illegal happened here. That's precisely the problem.