What is a privacy policy?
The document that explains what companies do with your data
A privacy policy is a legal document that tells you how a company collects, uses, and shares your personal information. By law, any company that collects data has to have one. That doesn't mean they're easy to read.
The average policy is 2,400 words. Most people skip them entirely. We do too. That's why bndries reads them for you and tells you what actually matters in seconds.
What they're required to disclose
Under regulations like the CCPA (effective January 2026), companies must tell you:
- What categories of data they collect (name, email, location, browsing history, etc.)
- Where it comes from (directly from you, data brokers, other companies)
- Why they're collecting it (advertising, analytics, fraud prevention, product improvement)
- Who can access it (advertisers, service providers, partners)
- How long they keep it before deleting
- Your rights (you can ask them what they have, delete it, or opt out of selling)
Why they're hard to read
Privacy policies are written for legal compliance, not clarity. They use technical terms like "share with partners for advertising purposes" instead of plain language. Important details often appear in subsections or footnotes. The length and structure make it hard to find what actually matters to you.
What changed in 2026
The CCPA updated on January 1, 2026 with stricter rules on "sensitive" data like biometric information and health data. Companies now need explicit consent to use sensitive data for anything beyond providing their core service. The bar for what counts as sensitive also got higher, which is good for you.