Two crossed lines that form an 'X'. It indicates a way to close an interaction, or dismiss a notification.Several email apps scrape the contents of people's inboxes and sell that data to finance and e-commerce companies, according to a newThe apps are primarily interested in tracking "transaction data," gleaning information from receipts and shipping emails that show people's consumer behavior.
Edison's website says it "accesses and processes" people's emails, and Cleanfox and Slice offer similar disclaimers. More specifically, the companies scan users' inboxes for emails that include receipts or shipping notifications to track the items users are purchasing and how much they're spending. An Edison spokesperson said in a statement to Business Insider that it uses software that "automatically recognizes commercial emails and extracts purchase information from them," ignoring "personal and work email."
In an email to Business Insider, Foxintelligence CEO Edouard Nattée emphasized that the company discloses to new users that it uses anonymized data from "transactional emails."
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