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Cash App vs Binance

Side-by-side comparison of the Terms of Service and Privacy Policy of Cash App and Binance.

Cash App logo
Cash App
Finance
★★☆☆☆
Mostly service-provider friendly

The documents contain several user-beneficial privacy rights and account controls, but they are outweighed by broad data sharing/advertising, automatic acceptance of term changes, discretionary account restrictions, and extensive retention and fee authority.

Cash App’s terms are fairly detailed and user-facing, but they include broad permissions for data use, frequent sharing with affiliates/partners, advertising, and strong company control over accounts and fees. Users get meaningful privacy rights in some jurisdictions, can delete/close accounts, and can opt out of certain targeted advertising, but the service also allows unilateral updates, extensive retention, and broad discretion to suspend or limit accounts.

Points of interest

  • negative ●●●●○ terms
    Terms can change unilaterally

    Cash App can revise the Terms and your continued use counts as acceptance. That means important rights or obligations can change without a separate opt-in from you.

  • negative ●●●●○ privacy
    Broad data sharing and advertising

    The privacy notice allows sharing with affiliates, service providers, merchants, and advertising partners, including for personalized ads. This can expose your activity across the broader Block ecosystem and ad tech partners.

  • negative ●●●●○ privacy
    Long retention after closure

    Cash App keeps information as long as needed for fraud, fees, disputes, legal compliance, and defense of rights, even after account closure. That means deletion/closure does not mean immediate erasure.

  • negative ●●●●○ terms
    Mandatory arbitration flagged

    The Terms explicitly direct users to individual arbitration provisions for legal disputes. This usually limits the ability to sue in court and may restrict class actions.

  • positive ●●●●○ privacy
    Deletion and closure available

    Users can ask Cash App to close their account and, in some jurisdictions, request deletion of personal information. This gives a meaningful off-ramp, even though retention exceptions still apply.

  • negative ●●●○○ privacy
    Targeted ads use app activity

    Cash App says it may use shopping history, app browsing behavior, card transactions, and general location to show personalized ads outside the app. Users can opt out, but the default posture is ad profiling.

  • negative ●●●○○ privacy
    Do Not Track ignored

    The website does not respond to browser DNT signals. If you rely on browser-level tracking controls, Cash App says those signals won’t be honored.

  • neutral ●●●○○ terms
    Dispute forum implied at signup

    By using the service, you agree to the Terms and referenced policies, including dispute-resolution terms. Practical effect: many disputes will be governed by the posted contract rather than general consumer expectations.

  • positive ●●●○○ privacy
    Portability right disclosed

    The privacy notice says some users can request their information in a portable format. That is useful if you want to move records to another provider or keep a copy of your data.

  • positive ●●●○○ privacy
    Contact sharing can be stopped

    You can choose whether Cash App accesses your phone contacts, and the settings let you stop sharing them later. This limits one common source of invasive contact syncing.

  • positive ●●○○○ privacy
    Privacy request channels listed

    The policy gives concrete ways to exercise privacy rights by support portal or phone, and mentions opt-outs for targeted advertising and some state-law rights. That makes the process more accessible than many services.

Documents

Binance logo
Binance
Finance
★★☆☆☆
User-cautious

The documents provide meaningful privacy rights and some regulatory protections, but the platform retains broad discretion over account access, heavy compliance monitoring, extensive data collection/sharing, and unilateral changes to terms and fees.

Binance’s legal terms are typical of a regulated finance platform but place substantial responsibility on users. It requires KYC/ongoing monitoring, uses broad data sharing across affiliates and service providers, and can suspend or close accounts for compliance or risk reasons. The terms and privacy notice also contain unilateral update rights, execution-only/no-advice language, and broad data retention tied to legal and operational needs. On the positive side, Binance offers access, correction, deletion in some cases, portability, direct marketing opt-outs, and regulatory complaint routes.

Points of interest

  • negative ●●●●○ terms
    Terms Can Change Unilaterally

    Binance can amend its terms, fees, and eligibility criteria by posting updates, and continued use counts as acceptance. That means key rules can change without your explicit consent, so you need to monitor notices closely.

  • negative ●●●●○ terms
    Account Suspension At Discretion

    Binance can suspend, restrict, or close accounts for a broad set of reasons, including compliance concerns, missing information, security issues, or suspicious activity. In practice, access to funds or services may be interrupted while issues are reviewed.

  • negative ●●●●○ terms
    User Bears Account Activity Risk

    You are responsible for all activity on your account and sub-accounts, including unauthorized use unless you promptly report a security breach. This raises the stakes for account security and fast reporting if anything goes wrong.

  • negative ●●●●○ terms
    Execution-Only, No Advice

    Binance says it generally provides execution-only services and does not give investment advice or personal recommendations. Users must judge suitability themselves and bear trading, leverage, and market-loss risks.

  • negative ●●●●○ privacy
    Extensive KYC And Monitoring

    Binance collects identity, financial, wallet, transaction, communications, cookie, and sometimes biometric or sensitive data, and it conducts ongoing AML/sanctions monitoring. Users may be asked for extra information at any time, and accounts can be restricted if they do not comply.

  • positive ●●●●○ privacy
    Access, Deletion, Portability

    The privacy notice says you can request access, correction, deletion in some cases, objection/restriction, portability, and consent withdrawal. Those are meaningful user rights if you want to inspect, move, or reduce your data footprint.

  • negative ●●●○○ terms
    Fees Can Be Deducted Directly

    Binance authorizes itself to deduct fees, interest, charges, and other amounts from your account assets, and can convert other assets if the exact asset is unavailable. That can reduce balances automatically and at Binance’s chosen rate.

  • negative ●●●○○ privacy
    Broad Data Sharing Network

    The privacy notice allows sharing with affiliates, service providers, independent controllers, authorities, and in business transfers. This means personal data can flow widely across the Binance ecosystem and outside it for operational and legal purposes.

  • negative ●●●○○ privacy
    Long Retention For Compliance

    Binance retains personal data as long as needed for services, legal obligations, disputes, tax/accounting, and AML compliance. There is no short, fixed deletion window, so records may remain for a lengthy period.

  • positive ●●●○○ privacy
    Marketing Opt-Out Available

    Binance says marketing data is shared with marketing partners only with explicit consent for contact-based marketing, and you can opt out or object to direct marketing. That gives users some control over promotional outreach.

  • positive ●●○○○ privacy
    Complaint Routes Listed

    The privacy notice provides a Data Protection Officer contact and local data protection authority complaint routes. This makes it easier to raise privacy concerns or escalate unresolved issues.

Documents

Comparison is based on each service's published Terms of Service and Privacy Policy. Read the source documents linked above before relying on any specific clause.