Entertainment News Privacy Policies
Companies in the Entertainment News category Browse and analyze privacy policies from 199 companies in the Entertainment News category.

Hollywoodlife
hollywoodlife.com
Hollywoodlife.com's policies are comprehensive but lack transparency in security and data retention, offer limited user rights, and use complex language, resulting in a moderate score of 62.

Journaldemontreal
journaldemontreal.com
The policy has some strengths in data privacy but lacks clarity and comprehensive user rights, scoring 62 out of 100.

Miamiherald
miamiherald.com
McClatchy's policies partially comply with privacy standards but lack transparency in data retention, security, and user control, with complex language hindering clarity.

Mic
mic.com
BDG's policies are detailed but lack transparency and fairness, scoring 62/100 with critical issues in data sharing and legal terms.

Mynet
mynet.com
Mynet's privacy policy is moderately transparent but lacks clarity in key areas like data retention and user rights, scoring 62/100.

Premier League
premierleague.com
The Premier League demonstrates strong ethical commitments but lacks transparency in data practices and user rights, with complex legal terms affecting clarity.

Sony Pictures Entertainment
sonypictures.com
The policy is transparent in data collection but lacks specificity in sharing and retention, with restrictive legal terms and unclear security measures.

StarTribune
startribune.com
The policy provides some user controls but has significant gaps in data privacy, user rights, and legal fairness, particularly concerning arbitration and data sharing.

Sun-sentinel
sun-sentinel.com
The policy is comprehensive but has significant weaknesses in transparency and user protection, particularly in data sharing and legal terms.

TMZ
tmz.com
The policy provides some user rights but has significant issues with legal protections and clarity, scoring 62 out of 100.

Telegraphindia
telegraphindia.com
ABP's policy has strengths in data collection transparency but lacks in security, user rights, and legal fairness, scoring 62/100.

The Daily Dot
dailydot.com
The policy has some strengths in clarity and opt-out mechanisms but lacks specificity in data practices and security, with concerning legal terms.