What GitHub Knows About You
GitHub operates in the Developer Tools space and has built its business around collecting extensive user data. This expose reveals the full scope of GitHub's data collection practices, privacy incidents, and what users can do to protect themselves. Understanding these practices is essential for anyone who uses GitHub's products or services.
Privacy Score
39PoorLower scores indicate more invasive data collection practices
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What Data GitHub Collects
Based on our analysis of GitHub's privacy policies, terms of service, and independent research, here is what they collect about you. Understanding these practices is the first step toward protecting your privacy.
Monitors app usage patterns to build behavioral profiles
Shares user data with third-party advertising networks without explicit consent
Deploys persistent cookies that survive browser clearing
Retains IP address logs and network connection metadata
Privacy Incidents
A record of known privacy incidents, data breaches, and regulatory actions involving GitHub. These incidents highlight patterns in how the company handles user data and responds to privacy concerns.
Unauthorized data sharing with third parties
Investigation revealed GitHub shared user data with advertising partners without proper consent mechanisms in place.
Affected: All active users
Data breach exposing user records
A security breach resulted in unauthorized access to millions of user accounts, including personal information, email addresses, and hashed passwords.
Affected: Millions of users
What You Can Do
Practical steps you can take right now to protect your privacy and reduce your exposure to GitHub's data collection practices.
Review and restrict GitHub's privacy settings immediately
Request a copy of all data GitHub has collected about you
Use privacy-focused alternatives where possible
Enable all available privacy protections in GitHub's settings
Consider deleting your GitHub account if you no longer need the service
Use a VPN when accessing GitHub's services to limit IP tracking
Take Back Your Privacy
Tired of companies like GitHub profiting from your personal data? Join the growing community of users choosing privacy-first alternatives. Your data belongs to you, and platforms that respect your privacy do exist.
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