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TikTok vs Facebook

Side-by-side comparison of the Terms of Service and Privacy Policy of TikTok and Facebook.

TikTok logo
TikTok
Social
★★☆☆☆
Below average for users

TikTok provides some useful controls and rights access, but its documents permit extensive data collection, personalization, cross-context advertising, broad sharing, broad content licensing, unilateral term changes, and mandatory Singapore arbitration for many users.

TikTok’s legal terms are typical of a large ad-supported social platform: it collects extensive user, device, behavioral, and inferred data; shares data broadly across partners and affiliates; and requires broad licenses over user content. It does offer account deletion, privacy controls, and rights request mechanisms, but the overall posture favors platform flexibility, advertising, and content reuse over user control.

Points of interest

  • negative ●●●●● terms
    Broad perpetual content license

    You keep ownership, but TikTok gets an irrevocable, perpetual, worldwide license to use, modify, distribute, and authorize others to use your content on any platform. That sharply limits practical control once you post.

  • negative ●●●●● terms
    Mandatory Singapore arbitration

    For many non-US/EEA users, disputes must be arbitrated in Singapore under SIAC rules rather than pursued in ordinary court. This can make claims harder and more expensive to bring.

  • negative ●●●●○ privacy
    Extensive tracking and profiling

    TikTok collects detailed usage, device, location, cookie, and content-analysis data, and infers traits like interests, age range, and gender. This supports deep personalization and targeted advertising.

  • negative ●●●●○ privacy
    Broad data sharing

    Your information may be shared with advertisers, analytics partners, affiliates, researchers, sellers, payment providers, and others. This expands the number of entities involved in handling your data.

  • negative ●●●●○ privacy
    Public content spreads widely

    If your profile is public, your content can be seen by anyone and may be indexed or redistributed by search engines, aggregators, and other third parties. Public posting can therefore have lasting reach beyond TikTok.

  • negative ●●●○○ terms
    Unilateral terms changes

    TikTok can amend its terms and privacy policy, and continued use counts as acceptance. Users must monitor updates or stop using the service if they disagree.

  • negative ●●●○○ privacy
    Long and flexible retention

    TikTok keeps data as long as needed for service, legal, security, and business purposes, and account data is generally kept while your account exists. In some jurisdictions it may keep data for five years or longer after use ends.

  • negative ●●●○○ terms
    Low liability cap

    If something goes wrong, TikTok limits many claims to the amount you paid in the last 12 months, which may be nothing for most users. The service is also offered largely 'as is.'

  • positive ●●●○○ privacy
    Deletion and settings controls

    TikTok says you can delete your entire account in Settings and adjust who can view videos, message you, or comment. Those in-app controls give users some practical privacy management tools.

  • positive ●●●○○ privacy
    Access and correction rights

    The privacy policy states users may have rights to access, delete, update, rectify, and complain about data use, and it provides a request mechanism. That is a meaningful transparency and control benefit.

  • positive ●●○○○ privacy
    Cookie opt-out options

    TikTok explains that users may refuse or disable certain cookies through browser, device, and app settings. This is useful, though the process can be fragmented across devices.

Documents

Facebook logo
Facebook
Social
★★☆☆☆
Below average for users

Facebook offers meaningful privacy rights disclosures, data access/portability/deletion tools, and many consumers can sue locally rather than arbitrate. But these benefits are outweighed by extensive tracking and ad profiling, broad sharing with partners and Meta companies, a sweeping content license, long deletion windows, and strong liability limitations.

Facebook is a free, ad-funded social platform with extensive data collection across Meta products, partner sites, devices and public sources. The terms preserve some user rights, like local-court access for many consumer disputes and access/deletion/portability rights, but they also grant Meta a broad content license, permit use of your identity in ads, allow broad sharing with partners, and retain deletion backups for months.

Points of interest

  • negative ●●●●● privacy
    Extensive data collection

    Meta collects a very broad range of data, including activity, device details, contacts, location, cookies, and partner data, even in some cases without an account. In practice, using Facebook can involve tracking across devices, services, and third-party sites.

  • negative ●●●●● terms
    Personalized ads by default

    Your personal data is used to target and measure ads on and off Meta products. This means your behavior and inferred interests help shape advertising across Facebook's ecosystem.

  • negative ●●●●○ terms
    Broad content license

    You keep ownership of your posts, photos, and videos, but grant Meta a worldwide, transferable, sublicensable, royalty-free license to use and modify them for service operation. This is a broad permission that continues until content is fully deleted.

  • negative ●●●●○ terms
    Identity used in ads

    Meta can use your name, profile photo, and ad-related actions next to sponsored content without paying you. Your social activity may therefore be used to endorse ads to others who can view that activity.

  • negative ●●●●○ privacy
    Public content widely reusable

    Public posts and profile information can be copied, reshared, downloaded, or indexed off-platform, including by search engines and third parties. Once something is public, practical control over it can be hard to regain.

  • negative ●●●●○ privacy
    Partners keep shared data

    Apps and websites connected through Facebook Login or integrations may access non-public information, and may retain data you already shared even after access expires. That creates ongoing privacy exposure outside Meta's direct control.

  • negative ●●●●○ terms
    Strong liability disclaimer

    Facebook is provided 'as is' and Meta disclaims warranties while limiting liability for indirect and consequential damages as far as law allows. If the service causes losses or disruptions, user remedies may be narrow.

  • positive ●●●●○ privacy
    Access, port, delete rights

    The policy expressly provides rights to access, correct, download, port, erase, object, and complain to a regulator. These are meaningful user protections, especially in regions covered by data protection law.

  • positive ●●●●○ terms
    Consumers may sue locally

    Consumer disputes are generally governed by the law of your home country and can be brought in competent local courts. This is more user-friendly than mandatory arbitration or exclusive foreign forum clauses for consumers.

  • negative ●●●○○ privacy
    Deletion can take months

    Deleting content or an account is not immediate: primary deletion may take up to 90 days, with up to another 90 days for backups, and some data may be kept longer for legal or safety reasons. Users should not expect instant erasure.

  • positive ●●●○○ terms
    No direct sale to advertisers

    Meta says it does not sell your personal data to advertisers or share direct identifiers like your name or email without specific permission. That reduces one common privacy risk, though substantial ad profiling and reporting still occur.

  • positive ●●○○○ terms
    Advance notice of term changes

    Meta says it will usually give at least 30 days' notice before material terms changes take effect. That gives users some time to review changes and decide whether to keep using the service.

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.