Based on our analysis, Standard Notes is the more privacy-respecting choice overall.
BACK →Overall
AdGuard
B+ · 82/100Standard Notes
A · 87/100What they collect
AdGuard
Positive (88)
Standard Notes
Positive (90)
Who they share it with
AdGuard
Positive (85)
Standard Notes
Positive (84)
What you can do
AdGuard
Mixed (73)
Standard Notes
Mixed (72)
What they promise
AdGuard
Mixed (78)
Standard Notes
Positive (82)
| Category | AdGuard | Standard Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Overall | B+ · 82/100 | A · 87/100 |
| What they collect | Positive (88) | Positive (90) |
| Who they share it with | Positive (85) | Positive (84) |
| What you can do | Mixed (73) | Mixed (72) |
| What they promise | Mixed (78) | Positive (82) |
AdGuard filters ads and trackers locally on your device so it never sees your browsing history, stores only an email address and password hash for account creation, keeps all personal data in its own data center in Frankfurt, names only payment processors as third-party recipients, and commits to emailing users before material policy changes — the main caveats are Cyprus jurisdiction, vague data retention periods, and a main policy that defers heavily to separate per-product privacy notices for the specifics of each platform.
View full analysis →Standard Notes is an end-to-end encrypted note-taking app that genuinely cannot read your notes; analytics are self-hosted via Plausible with no IP retention, apps collect zero usage data or location, and the subprocessor list is short and transparent — the main weaknesses are US jurisdiction and AWS hosting, the absence of published security audit reports, a thin policy that lacks GDPR rights language, and email marketing enabled by default.
View full analysis →You might also want to compare