Does Ad-Free Mean Less Data Collection? An Empirical Study of Platform Data Practices and User Expectations

Conference Paper (2026)
Author(s)

Sepehr Mousavi (Max Planck Institute for Software Systems)

Abhisek Dash (Max Planck Institute for Software Systems)

Savvas Zannettou (TU Delft - Technology, Policy and Management)

Krishna P. Gummadi (Max Planck Institute for Software Systems)

Research Group
Organisation & Governance
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1145/3774904.3792558 Final published version
More Info
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Publication Year
2026
Language
English
Research Group
Organisation & Governance
Pages (from-to)
3287-3298
Publisher
ACM
ISBN (electronic)
9798400723070
Event
35th ACM Web Conference, WWW 2026 (2026-06-29 - 2026-07-03), Dubai, United Arab Emirates
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Abstract

Online platforms increasingly offer "paid"ad-free subscriptions as an alternative to the traditional "free"ad-based model. The transition to ad-free models ostensibly removes advertising as a key justification for data processing under the GDPR. So, normatively, platforms should collect less user data. However, platforms may justify continued data collection as a means to provide an improved, personalized experience. This tension between privacy principles and platform incentives raises a critical underexplored question: do data collection practices vary between ad-free and ad-based subscription models? In this paper, we shed light on this important privacy issue by investigating the alignment between platform data collection practices and related user expectations. With respect to data collection process, our analyses of data exports from three major online platforms - Instagram, Facebook, and X - reveal that these platforms continue to retain or collect some ad-related data, even in ad-free subscriptions. With respect to user expectations, our survey among 255 participants on Prolific reveals that 69% of the participants normatively expect data collection to be reduced, indicating their expectation of improved digital privacy in an ad-free model. However, when asked what they think actually happens, 63% of these participants believed that platforms would still collect about the same amount of data, highlighting skepticism about platform practices. Our findings not only indicate a significant disconnect between data practices and normative user expectations, but also raise serious questions about platform compliance with core GDPR principles, such as purpose limitation, data minimization, and transparency.