When you use Google, you are making a deal. You get to use services like Gmail, Drive, search, YouTube, and Google Maps for free.
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In exchange, you agree to share information about yourself that Google can share with advertisers so their ads are more effective. For instance, airlines want to target people who love to travel. Children's clothing makers want to target parents.
Google uses a lot of methods to learn about you. There's the stuff you tell Google outright when you sign up for its Gmail or to use your Android phone. This includes your name, phone number, location, and so on.
But Google also watches you as you scamper around the internet, deducing your interests from your internet searches — what do you search for? click on? — from your use of Google's other services and from other websites you visit.
By visiting a hard-to-find page called "Web & App Activity," you can see what Google is watching.
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Then by visiting a site called "Ads Settings," you can see what Google thinks it knows about you, and you can change what it's telling advertisers about you.
Read on for the details:
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It's not easy to find your "Web & App Activity" page. You must be logged in to Google to see it. Once logged in, go to "https://history.google.com/history/" and click on "all time."
This brings up a long list of all the web pages you searched. You can delete them all, but the option that lets you do that isn't easy to find. You can, very easily, delete one day at a time. That will take forever to cover years' worth of data, but you can try. Click on today, then click the delete button at the top.
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You'll have to deal with a warning from Google telling you that you don't really want to delete this information. The truth is, Google doesn't want you to delete this information. You may or may not want to, but don't worry if you do. You won't break the internet or your Google account if you hit the delete button.
To delete all of your Web and App Activity in one shot, go back to the main Web and App Activity page, and click on the three dots at the top corner of the page. Then click on "Delete options," then on "Advanced" and then on "All time."
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Now, click on the little menu button on the top left of the screen.
Here's where you'll find links to the voice, device, location, and YouTube records Google keeps on you. You can go to those pages and see what Google has on you, and delete stuff, too.
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If you want to delete all of, you can access that option through the three dots at the top right corner.
But you'll have to deal with Google's warnings on why you don't want to do that.
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If you click on "location history" in the menu, it takes you to a page with a map, which represents your "timeline" of where and when you traveled, with Google Maps or other location services. Now click on the settings button on the lower-right corner.
From here you can delete all of your location data, if you choose. But if you really want to see all the data Google has collected on you, click on "download a copy of all your data." You can also get to this download page from your "account settings" page. More on that below.
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Click on "select all." Scroll down and select "next."
Select your file type. We recommend the default, .zip, since Windows and Macs can typically open those files without problems, and select your delivery method. You might want to save it to Drive if you have the space. Google warns that archives that are emailed may take hours or days to compile. You'll have to be patient. It still took two hours when using Drive. Google will email you when it's done.
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Google sent me two ENORMOUS 2G files on what it is tracking on me. Inside were folders of stuff, including computer scripts on me and my data. But most of it was photos. Every photo I ever uploaded since 2013, full size. Here's a photo of my puppy that it sent, and an example of the JSON scripts and the list of files in folders that it sent.
While you are waiting, you can explore what advertisers are told about you. While you are logged in, go to any Google service and click on your account icon. Then click on "my account."
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This takes you to your account-settings page. On the left, the "Activity controls" lets you explore all the daily information Google keeps on you. "Control your content" lets you download all of your data. But this time, click on "Ads settings," then scroll down and click on "Manage ad settings."
This is what Google thinks I'm into. Some stuff is accurate: bikes, fitness, books, food & drink, mobile phones. Some is not: East Asian Music? Banking? Cleaning Agents? Rap & Hip-Hop? I think that's Google's way of guessing my gender (cleaning/hair), my ethnic background (Asian) and my age (Hip-Hop) because I deleted my gender and age information two years ago, the last time I checked on what Google was monitoring.
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Scroll down and click on "Control signed-out ads" and you can turn off "interest-based ads" at least for this browser, which stops Google from sharing this kind of stuff with advertisers. Google will warn you against it. Or you can switch to the DuckDuckGo search engine, which promises not to track you at all.
On February 28, Axel Springer, Business Insider's parent company, joined 31 other media groups and filed a $2.3 billion suit against Google in Dutch court, alleging losses suffered due to the company's advertising practices.
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