Based on our analysis, 1Password is the more privacy-respecting choice overall.
BACK →Overall
DeleteMe
C+ · 58/1001Password
B · 74/100What they collect
DeleteMe
Mixed (62)
1Password
Mixed (78)
Who they share it with
DeleteMe
Mixed (55)
1Password
Mixed (65)
What you can do
DeleteMe
Mixed (57)
1Password
Mixed (73)
What they promise
DeleteMe
Mixed (58)
1Password
Mixed (76)
| Category | DeleteMe | 1Password |
|---|---|---|
| Overall | C+ · 58/100 | B · 74/100 |
| What they collect | Mixed (62) | Mixed (78) |
| Who they share it with | Mixed (55) | Mixed (65) |
| What you can do | Mixed (57) | Mixed (73) |
| What they promise | Mixed (58) | Mixed (76) |
DeleteMe must collect your full personal identity — name, address, date of birth, aliases, family members — to remove it from data brokers, and while it confirms it never sells that data, the primary policy is a deliberately informal TLDR that defers partner data sharing to a separate Cookie Policy, ignores Do Not Track signals, and includes a broad business transfer clause that could expose your data if the company is ever sold.
View full analysis →1Password can never read your saved passwords — they're end-to-end encrypted and even 1Password holds no keys — but outside the vault, the company collects substantial usage and diagnostic data, shares information with advertising partners in ways that may legally count as a data sale, and applies vague retention language to everything that isn't your vault content.
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