Microsoft vs X
Based on our analysis, Microsoft is the more privacy-respecting choice overall.
BACK →| Category | Microsoft | X |
|---|---|---|
| Overall | C- · 44/100 | F · 24/100 |
| What they collect | Concern (35) | Concern (20) |
| Who they share it with | Concern (40) | Concern (18) |
| What you can do | Mixed (58) | Concern (35) |
| What they promise | Mixed (52) | Concern (38) |
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.
View full analysis →X collects everything you do on and off the platform, infers your identity even when you're signed out, and explicitly allows third-party 'collaborators' to use your data to train their own AI models. There is no meaningful way to stop the core collection, your public posts are available via API for mass scraping, and security is disclosed only in the vaguest terms.
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