Is Unroll.me Safe? What the FTC Settlement Means for Your Privacy
In 2017, the New York Times revealed that Unroll.me — a popular free email unsubscribe tool — was selling anonymized user email data to companies like Uber. The FTC later settled with Unroll.me's parent company, Slice Intelligence, confirming the practice.
The core issue: Unroll.me scanned users' inboxes not just to manage subscriptions, but to extract purchase receipts and sell aggregated consumer spending data to third parties. Users had no idea their email content was being monetized.
This raises an important question: if an email tool is free, how is it making money? In Unroll.me's case, the answer was your data.
What to look for in a privacy-respecting alternative: First, check if the tool stores email content on its servers. Second, look for a clear business model — if it's free with no obvious revenue source, you're likely the product. Third, verify the tool's OAuth permissions: does it request "read-only" or full access?
Some alternatives to consider: Clean Email ($9.99/month, no data selling), SaneBox ($7-36/month, AI sorting), or Gorganizer ($4.99 one-time, processes emails in-memory without storage, EU-hosted). Each has different trade-offs between price, features, and privacy guarantees.
The bottom line: free email tools that require full inbox access should be treated with skepticism. Your email data is valuable — make sure you're not paying for a "free" service with your privacy.
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