Discord vs Samsung
Based on our analysis, Discord is the more privacy-respecting choice overall.
BACK →| Category | Discord | Samsung |
|---|---|---|
| Overall | C+ · 58/100 | D · 39/100 |
| What they collect | Mixed (52) | Concern (25) |
| Who they share it with | Mixed (55) | Concern (32) |
| What you can do | Positive (72) | Mixed (50) |
| What they promise | Positive (65) | Mixed (45) |
Discord collects your messages, activity, device data, and behavioural signals, and uses them for personalisation and sponsored content targeting — but it doesn't sell your data, encrypts voice and video end-to-end, and gives you genuine in-app controls over most processing. The biggest risks are public server content being used to train AI systems and third-party bots operating largely outside Discord's privacy guarantees.
View full analysis →Samsung's data appetite is unusually broad for a hardware maker: voice recordings stored on servers with potential third-party retention, keyboard input logging via Predictive Text synced across devices, and persistent hardware identifiers that survive ad-ID resets. The company explicitly acknowledges that sharing with business partners may constitute a data sale under US law (CCPA). Full GDPR-grade rights are reserved for EEA/UK/Swiss residents; everyone else gets basic access and deletion with no response-time commitments. Retention timelines are vague and there are no named security certifications or breach notification windows.
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