EU’s law on user data and privacy – the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) – has given users the right to request all their data that’s collected by a service or a company.

Recently, a Spotify user – Peter Steinberger – exercised this right of theirs, and then took to Twitter to share what all the data the music streaming service has been collecting.

Yeah, everything, including IP addresses, window sizes, connection timeouts, and what song user stops and when.

Not only this, Steinberger found even the brand of their headphones in the data revealed by Spotify.

It’s not clear if the company officially offers a break up of what it does with all this data.

Of course, some of the data is used for offering customized experience to users. However, several users are of the opinion the company just collects everything it can, with no specific plan on how to use all the extra stuff.

To conclude, this is just one user sharing their data. More details could emerge if other Spotify users demand this info from the company and share that publicly.

PiunikaWeb is a unique initiative that mainly focuses on investigative journalism. This means we do a lot of hard work to come up with news stories that are either ‘exclusive,’ ‘breaking,’ or ‘curated’ in nature. Perhaps that’s the reason our work has been picked by the likes of Forbes, Engadget, The Verge, Macrumors, and more. Do take a tour of our website to get a feel of our work. And if you like what we do, stay connected with us on Twitter (@PiunikaWeb) and other social media channels to receive timely updates on stories we publish.

Tags

bootloader

Dr. Aparajita Sharma
1261 Posts

A budding entrepreneur by profession, and a psychologist by education. As a founding member of PiunikaWeb, I am nurturing this firstborn with my sharp-eyed expertise and even journalistic writing when needed.

Next article View Article

[Update: Fixed] Android Auto showing weather for wrong locations, Google working on it

New updates are being added at the bottom of this story……. Original story (published on January 10, 2018) follows: A new Android Auto issue has come to light. Adding to...
Sep 03, 2021 0 Min Read