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privacyfriendly

Privacyfriendly is an adjective used to describe processes, products, or policies that are designed to protect individuals' privacy and reduce the collection, use, and sharing of personal data. In technology, privacyfriendly designs aim to give users control, minimize data collection by default, use strong security measures, and be transparent about data practices.

Key principles include data minimization, purpose limitation, informed consent, transparency about data handling, privacy-by-design and privacy-by-default,

Examples of privacyfriendly implementations span web browsers with tracking protection, messaging apps with end-to-end encryption, search

The term is widely used in policy and industry discussions, but it is not a standardized label

See also: privacy by design, data minimization, consent, encryption, open source software.

and
strong
protections
such
as
encryption
and
secure
defaults.
Where
possible,
information
should
be
processed
locally
or
in
a
privacy-preserving
manner
(e.g.,
on-device
processing,
anonymization,
pseudonymization).
Open
source
software
and
verifiable
implementations
are
often
associated
with
privacyfriendly
approaches
because
they
allow
independent
scrutiny.
tools
that
avoid
unnecessary
profiling,
and
operating
systems
or
devices
that
emphasize
user
control
over
permissions
and
telemetry.
Privacyfriendly
products
may
also
employ
privacy-preserving
technologies
such
as
differential
privacy
or
secure
multiparty
computation.
and
can
be
used
as
marketing.
It
intersects
with
broader
frameworks
like
privacy
by
design,
data
protection
regulations
(e.g.,
GDPR),
and
data
minimization
requirements.
Benefits
include
increased
user
trust
and
regulatory
compliance;
challenges
include
potential
trade-offs
with
usability
or
functionality,
performance,
cost,
and
the
risk
of
vague
or
inconsistent
claims.