Is Browser Use safe with your data?
Browser Use
Good disclosure · low confidence
Browser Use earns a B (74/100) because it discloses most of its data practices.
#30
of 177 apps ranked
74
score · Automation avg 65
+9
vs category average
Browser Use discloses no data sales and basic user rights (access, deletion, correction) but critically lacks a named mechanism to opt out of model training on user Inputs, maintains indefinite retention periods, and does not explicitly limit output reuse to service-only scope, resulting in material transparency gaps on training governance and data lifecycle.
What Browser Use's privacy policy says about your data
No data sales
Policy explicitly states it does not sell personal information or share for interest-based advertising, providing strong protection against commercial exploitation.
Training without opt-out
Policy discloses Inputs train AI models to improve Services but does not name an opt-out mechanism, creating a gap in user control over training data use.
Indefinite retention policy
Personal data is retained for as long as necessary without a named retention period, creating ambiguity about how long data persists after service termination.
Children's protections
Policy states services are not directed at children under 13 and commits to deletion if child data is collected without parental consent.
The area-by-area breakdown for Browser Use is being prepared and will appear after its next scoring pass on the current rubric. The summary and highlights above reflect the latest assessment.
Details
- Category
- Automation
- Modalities
- text
- Processes biometrics
- No
- Policy last updated
- Not stated
- Region scored
- Global / US-default
- Assessed
- 2026-06-20
Each grade reflects our analysis of what an app states in its public privacy policy and terms as of the assessment date. It measures the transparency of those documents, not the company's actual data practices, security, or compliance. Grades are our opinion, offered for general information. Full disclaimer.