Antennapod: Is your app is freeware for edit, update or integrate for religious audio store use.

Created on 9 Feb 2020  Â·  3Comments  Â·  Source: AntennaPod/AntennaPod

Dear sir/madam,

Kindly revert back .

**Does the following AntennaPod privacy policy allow anyone to edit, update or integrate for religious audio store

use?**.

AntennaPod Privacy Policy
AntennaPod is developed and maintained by individual volunteers and not represented by any legal entity. The
community doesn't need your data, so the app and website are designed to be fully GDPR compliant. Read on to
learn more.
What kind of data we store
The AntennaPod app only stores data strictly necessary to for the app to function, as provided by you, the user.
This includes for example the list of podcasts you follow, the app settings, and authentication data provided for
specific podcasts or services (such as Gpodder). The app does not include any advertisement libraries or any 3rd
party tracking (analytics) code, such as Google Analytics.
The AntennaPod website, hosted via GitHub Pages, does not store any cookies on your machine, and no 3rd party
tracking (analytics) or other services are used.
How AntennaPod processes your data
All data provided using the AntennaPod app is stored locally on your device. AntennaPod does not upload your
data anywhere, except where strictly necessary for the functioning of the app. The cases where specific bits of
information are sent to 3rd parties include, but may not be limited to:
certain podcast providers, when provided in the feed settings: authentication data
synchronisation service (gpodder.net), when enabled in the app settings: login credentials and all your
subscriptions and playback events requested by the service (see the gpodder.net Privacy Policy
(https://gpodder.net/privacy/) how gpodder.net handles your data)
podcast discovery services (fyyd, iTunes, gpodder.net), when using the podcast search feature: search
keywords, and in some cases the app name ("AntennaPod")
The developers of AntennaPod do not have access to any of your information, except when you actively share
debugging information (either via email using the 'Crash Report' function, or via the Android crash reporting
functionality of Google).
What data other parties might collect, store and
process
Google: If you have activated backup & reset in your phone settings (Settings → Backup & Reset → Back up my
data), you should be aware that Android itself will periodically save a copy of your phone's data in Google's servers.
This backup contains private information, including your WiFi passwords, messages and call history. It may also
include data from AntennaPod and from other apps you use. The developers of AntennaPod do not have access to
this data.
Podcast hosters: The web servers that provide the podcast feeds might collect additional data, such as your IP
address, access time and what is being accessed. This includes the episodes you are downloading or streaming.
Please refer to their respective privacy policies for details. You can view the URL of a podcast by opening the
podcast and pressing the info icon. AntennaPod does not allow remote servers to set cookies. The servers can
detect the fact that you are using AntennaPod and which version of AntennaPod you are using (HTTP User-Agent).
If multiple podcasts are hosted on the same server, the server can detect the list of podcasts that you subscribed
to and that are hosted on that server. This might happen if publishers use feedburner, podtrac or similar services
to distribute their feeds.
Search services: When using the search feature of iTunes, fyyd or gpodder.net, those services can store your
query. After subscribing, the feed is usually served from the creator's server.
Permissions
The app requests the following privacy-relevant Android permissions:
Read from/write to Storage (Photos/Media/Files)
The storage permission is used to open files that are not downloaded directly from within the app. It can
also be used to import app settings or OPML files. The permission is only requested if you perform an
action that requires reading from storage.
View WiFi connections
AntennaPod allows to restrict automatic updates to specific WiFi networks.
Updates of this Privacy Policy
The developers may update this policy in the future. It is advisable to check the policy periodically for any changes.
Changes to this Privacy Policy are effective when they are made on this document.
This Privacy Policy was last updated on 2019-07-20.
If you have questions, open an issue (https://github.com/AntennaPod/AntennaPod/issues/new) on GitHub.

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@keunes I want to ask whether Antenna Pod is open source completely and free to modify and use for non commercial use. If so i want to use it for my personal podcast and feed my episodes only and distribute with my podcast name on Play store.

You can definitely do that (even though it would restrict the users - why not just let them choose whatever podcast player they like?). AntennaPod was even built for this kind of usage. It has some abstractions that can be used to make it a single purpose app. If you have more than one of the single purpose apps installed, they will suggest to install AntennaPod where you have everything in one app. Have a look at this repo for details on how to make a single purpose app: https://github.com/danieloeh/AntennaPodSP

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