Google’s following Apple again by committing tointroduce privacy labelsfor Android apps in the Play Store next year.

Google will show these labels for the app on the Play Store under the new Saftey section. It’ll show you what kind of data the app collects — approximate or exact location, personal information, photos, and storage — and how it plans to use the data.

The iPhone maker gavea glimpse of these labelslast year at the Worldwide Developer Conference (WWDC), and introduced them to the App Store later in December. They give you an indication of what data the app is collecting from you.

In addition to data collection labels, the Safety section will show if the app follows Google’s family guidelines, security practices like encrypting data, and data deletion on request. These are useful indicators that give more context about how your data lives on the app developer’s server, and it’s as important as knowing what data is being collected.

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[Read:Google will soon automatically enroll users in 2FA]

The company has given a timeline for the label implementation on its blog. In the next quarter, the firm plans to issue a policy about this new feature, and later in the year, it’ll allow developers to start declaring these labels in the Google Play consoles.

Google hasn’t launched any pop-up like Apple thatasks users for their permissions for tracking their data, but the upcoming Safety section will have a place for apps to explain why they need to track user data.

The company plans to enforce safety labels on apps by mid-next year, but it hasn’t said what will happen to the apps that aren’t in compliance. It’s notable that the Big G tookits own sweet timein rolling out privacy labels for its own iOS apps earlier this year.

Story byIvan Mehta

Ivan covers Big Tech, India, policy, AI, security, platforms, and apps for TNW. That’s one heck of a mixed bag. He likes to say “Bleh.“Ivan covers Big Tech, India, policy, AI, security, platforms, and apps for TNW. That’s one heck of a mixed bag. He likes to say “Bleh.”

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