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ConsenSys Announces New Policy Update to MetaMask and Infura Amidst Privacy Backlash

ConsenSys, the company behind the MetaMask, has said it will update policies for the crypto wallet. Last month’s criticized policy would have seen ConsenSys collect user names, dates of birth, IP addresses, contact information, gender, and wallet data.

In a blog post on Tuesday, December 6th, ConsenSys explained the new updates to data retention on two of its core products — MetaMask and Infura. The move is in response to the backlash the company received for the earlier update.

According to ConsenSys, the company will only collect wallet and IP addresses when users make a transaction to ensure successful propagation, execution, and other functionalities like DDoS protection.

ConsenSys clarified that the new data retention update will see the data collected stored for only seven days. It also notes that it does not sell user data, strictly adhering to “the use limitations described in our privacy policy.”

ConsenSys will limit data collection to on-chain transactions, not every time user avail of their account balances.

Joe Lubin, the founder of ConsenSys, says the company accelerated its activities based on the recent intensity of the discussion on privacy concerns.

Read the initial policy update in:

Metamask Owner ConsenSys Say They Collect Wallet Data, Users Outraged

Find out why the Ethereum project is exciting in:

Vitalik Buterin Shares His Five Things About Ethereum to Be Excited About

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