YouTube vs Discord
Side-by-side comparison of the Terms of Service and Privacy Policy of YouTube and Discord.
YouTube offers meaningful user controls, export/deletion options, and favorable EEA court protections, but balances these with extensive data collection, cross-service ad personalization, broad content licenses, and strong platform discretion over content and accounts.
YouTube’s legal terms are relatively transparent for EEA/Swiss users and include local-court rights, data export/deletion tools, and notice/appeal mechanisms for many enforcement actions. But the service relies heavily on broad data collection, cross-service personalization, ad-driven tracking, automated content analysis, and a wide license over user uploads, while retaining flexibility to change the service and terms.
Points of interest
-
negative ●●●●○ privacyExtensive data collection
Google collects a wide range of information about your activity, devices, identifiers, and location. In practice, using YouTube can feed a broad profile used across Google services.
-
negative ●●●●○ privacyCross-service ad tracking
Your activity across Google services, devices, and some partner sites/apps may be linked for personalization and advertising, depending on settings. This can significantly expand tracking beyond YouTube itself.
-
positive ●●●●○ privacyExport and deletion tools
Google provides tools to review, export, delete specific data, delete product-specific data, or delete your whole account. This gives users unusually practical control over leaving the service or cleaning up stored information.
-
positive ●●●●○ termsLocal courts for EEA
EEA and Swiss users generally keep the right to rely on local law and sue in their local courts, rather than being forced into arbitration. This is a major consumer-rights protection.
-
negative ●●●○○ termsBroad license to uploads
You keep ownership of your videos, but grant YouTube a worldwide, transferable, sublicensable, royalty-free license to use, modify, distribute, and display them. Other users also get a broad service-enabled license to your content.
-
negative ●●●○○ termsYouTube may monetize uploads
YouTube reserves the right to place ads on your content or charge users for access, and the Terms themselves do not guarantee you payment. Creators may therefore see their content monetized without compensation unless another agreement applies.
-
negative ●●●○○ termsAccount termination discretion
YouTube can suspend or terminate access for breaches, legal requirements, or conduct it believes creates liability or harm. Although it promises case-by-case review and often notice, the platform keeps substantial discretion.
-
positive ●●●○○ privacyAuto-delete and activity controls
Users can manage saved activity, pause histories, and set some data to auto-delete. That offers meaningful privacy controls, even though tracking is extensive by default or by feature use.
-
positive ●●●○○ termsNotice and appeal options
For many content removals, strikes, suspensions, and terminations, YouTube says it will provide reasons and offers internal appeal routes, with court access also referenced. That improves transparency compared with many platforms.
-
negative ●●○○○ termsTerms and service changes
YouTube can change the service and the agreement for business, legal, security, or abuse reasons. It usually gives advance notice, but urgent changes may happen without that review window.
-
negative ●●○○○ privacyRetention can be lengthy
Some data is kept until you delete it or your account, and other data may be retained longer for legal or business reasons. Deletion may also take time to complete across active and backup systems.
-
positive ●●○○○ privacyNo rights reduction without consent
Google says it will not reduce your privacy rights under the policy without your explicit consent. That is a meaningful commitment against silent erosion of stated privacy protections.
Documents
Discord provides notable privacy controls, says it does not sell personal information, offers deletion/access tools, and gives notice of major privacy-policy changes. However, it also uses broad categories of data for personalization, ads, and service improvement, allows extensive sharing with vendors and some advertising partners, and includes strong legal protections for itself such as mandatory arbitration, class-action waiver, liability caps, and broad termination rights.
Discord’s terms and privacy policy are relatively transparent and offer meaningful user controls like data access, deletion, and some limits on personalization. But the service also collects broad usage and content data, shares data with vendors/advertisers, reserves broad moderation and termination rights, and imposes arbitration, class-action waiver, liability limits, and indemnity obligations on many users.
Points of interest
-
negative ●●●●● termsMandatory arbitration waiver
U.S. and Canada users generally must resolve disputes through individual arbitration, not court, and waive jury trials and class actions. This can make it harder and sometimes more expensive to pursue claims.
-
negative ●●●●○ termsLiability capped at $100
If Discord harms you, its financial responsibility is heavily limited to the greater of what you paid in the prior three months or $100. That can sharply reduce practical remedies for outages, data loss, or other service issues.
-
negative ●●●●○ termsBroad indemnity obligation
You may have to cover Discord’s legal costs and liabilities for claims related to your use, content, violations, or misconduct. This shifts significant risk onto users, especially creators or server operators.
-
positive ●●●●○ privacyNo sale of personal data
Discord expressly says it does not sell personal information and says its business is funded by subscriptions, paid products, and sponsored content instead. That is a meaningful privacy-positive commitment.
-
positive ●●●●○ privacyStrong account deletion tools
Users can disable or delete their account from settings, and Discord says deletion permanently removes identifying information and anonymizes other data. This gives users a clear exit path, though some retention exceptions remain.
-
positive ●●●●○ privacyData access and portability
You can request a copy of your data in settings, and Discord says it provides the data in common digital formats such as JSON. This supports transparency and portability if you want to review or move your information.
-
negative ●●●○○ termsBroad content license
You keep ownership of what you post, but Discord gets a worldwide, transferable, sublicensable license to use and adapt it for operating and improving the service. That is common, but still a broad grant users should understand.
-
negative ●●●○○ privacyExtensive data collection
Discord collects account details, messages and uploads, device and usage data, purchase data, and information from advertisers and other third parties. This supports personalization, safety, analytics, and advertising of Discord itself.
-
negative ●●●○○ privacyContent used for moderation models
Public or widely available content and some reported material may be used to build automated safety and moderation systems. Users should know their content may help train detection systems, not just be displayed to recipients.
-
negative ●●●○○ termsCan suspend or terminate broadly
Discord can suspend or terminate accounts for violations, legal demands, safety concerns, risk to others, or even over two years of inactivity. It may do so with or without notice, subject to law.
-
positive ●●●○○ privacyPrivacy controls in settings
Discord offers settings to limit personalization and some data use for service improvement, plus controls for visibility and safety features. These controls do not eliminate collection entirely, but they give users meaningful choices.
-
positive ●●●○○ privacyNotice for major privacy changes
Discord says it will date updates and provide more prominent notice when privacy-policy changes are significant, such as email or in-app highlighting where required. This is better than silent policy changes.
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.