Google vs Microsoft
Based on our analysis, Microsoft is the more privacy-respecting choice overall.
BACK →| Category | Microsoft | |
|---|---|---|
| Overall | D · 26/100 | C- · 44/100 |
| What they collect | Concern (8) | Concern (35) |
| Who they share it with | Mixed (42) | Concern (40) |
| What you can do | Mixed (58) | Mixed (58) |
| What they promise | Mixed (55) | Mixed (52) |
Google tracks almost everything you do online — every search, email, location, video, and website visit — across all their products and millions of third-party sites, then uses it to sell ads. They do give you unusually good tools to review and delete your data, but the defaults collect everything.
View full analysis →Microsoft's privacy statement covers an enormous product surface — Windows, Office, Azure, Bing, Xbox, and Copilot — and the data practices vary dramatically across them. The umbrella policy is deliberately vague, deferring almost all specifics to product-level documentation. Cross-product data combination, AI model training on your content, and employer/school access to your files and communications are the key risks most consumers don't realise they're accepting.
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