Wednesday, February 11, 2026
ADVT 
National

Desjardins Insurance Mobile App For Drivers Raises Privacy Concerns

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Apr, 2015 01:29 PM
    TORONTO — A Canadian insurance company has developed a mobile app that purports to evaluate a user's driving behaviour and offer discounts on their premiums if their skills are up to snuff.
     
    But at least one privacy lawyer is urging caution when downloading the Ajusto app developed by Desjardins Insurance.
     
    Desjardins says iPhone and Android users can download Ajusto for free to have it start scoring driving performance.
     
    The company says Ajusto's score is calculated by monitoring a driver's speed, smoothness and travel distance, as well as logging what time of day the user is most often on the road.
     
    Privacy lawyer David Young says drivers shouldn't start using the app before understanding what they may be getting into.
     
    He says users should be very clear on what purpose their personal information will be used for, as well as how Desjardins plans to keep it secure and for how long.
     
    Young adds that Ajusto's developers could be doing more to make sure customers are well informed when they sign up.
     
    He says a review of Desjardins' own privacy policies suggests that the company is in compliance with federal regulations on app use, but he believes users should look at the bigger picture when allowing mobile devices to monitor behaviour as personal as driving patterns and travel times and locations.
     
    "Desjardins is not going to use this data except for very specific purposes, but if somebody else gains access to it, what are the implications of that?" Young said in a telephone interview. "The more data there is, the more risk there is."
     
    Desjardins did not immediately respond to a request for comment on its retention plans. A description of the app on the Ajusto website states that users will never be financially penalized for a low driving score and could save up to 25 per cent on their insurance premiums if they perform well.
     
    Young said Desjardins should be doing more to highlight the potential risks associated with Ajusto.
     
    Currently users do not see any privacy details until after they've entered an email address into the program. A privacy policy is then available, but it's found in the middle of a lengthy terms and conditions document that users must agree to abide by before they continue.
     
    Young said a better approach would be for the company to highlight the privacy policy separately and make it available much sooner in the signup process. A link to the company's general policies on security practices and data storage would also be a valuable addition, he added.
     
    Making such information available up front would bring the company in line with advice that some of Canada's privacy commissioners offered to app marketplaces last December.
     
    Federal watchdog Daniel Therrien, as well as his counterparts in Alberta and British Columbia, were among 23 privacy commissioners around the world who signed an open letter calling for entities such as the Apple App Store and Google Play to display privacy details of their merchandise more prominently.
     
    "Given the wide range and potential sensitivity of the data stored in mobile devices, we firmly believe that privacy practice information (for example, privacy policy links)should be required (and not optional) for apps that collect data in and through mobile devices within an app marketplace store," the letter reads.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Ottawa Promises $50m Over Five Years To Support Canadian Exporters

    Ottawa Promises $50m Over Five Years To Support Canadian Exporters
    MISSISSAUGA, Ont. — The federal government is putting up $50 million over five years for export development.

    Ottawa Promises $50m Over Five Years To Support Canadian Exporters

    Parts Of Atlantic Canada Snowed Under With Second Storm In Three Days

    Parts Of Atlantic Canada Snowed Under With Second Storm In Three Days
    HALIFAX — Blowing snow battered parts of Atlantic Canada for the second time in three days Wednesday, closing businesses and government offices and snarling transportation in the region.

    Parts Of Atlantic Canada Snowed Under With Second Storm In Three Days

    RCMP Say Illegal Fentanyl Linked To More Than 100 Deaths In Alberta Last Year

    RCMP Say Illegal Fentanyl Linked To More Than 100 Deaths In Alberta Last Year
    EDMONTON — RCMP and health officials are raising the alarm about a painkilling drug linked to more than 100 deaths last year in Alberta.

    RCMP Say Illegal Fentanyl Linked To More Than 100 Deaths In Alberta Last Year

    Globe And Mail Leads National Newspaper Award Nominations With 16 Finalists

    Globe And Mail Leads National Newspaper Award Nominations With 16 Finalists
    TORONTO — The Globe and Mail has captured the most nominations for the 2014 National Newspaper Awards with 16 entries on the list of finalists.

    Globe And Mail Leads National Newspaper Award Nominations With 16 Finalists

    Weaning Canada Off Fossil Fuels: Scholars Says Low Carbon Economy Within Reach

    Weaning Canada Off Fossil Fuels: Scholars Says Low Carbon Economy Within Reach
    Dozens of Canada's top scholars are urging a sweeping remake of how the country produces and uses its energy in a necessary effort to wean itself off fossil fuels.

    Weaning Canada Off Fossil Fuels: Scholars Says Low Carbon Economy Within Reach

    Jurors At Via Terror Trial Given Fresh Instructions On Element Of Intent

    Jurors At Via Terror Trial Given Fresh Instructions On Element Of Intent
    TORONTO — Two men accused of plotting to derail a passenger train need to have "genuinely meant" to bring about that alleged crime, as opposed to feigning that intention, a jury was told Wednesday as they entered their eighth day of deliberations.

    Jurors At Via Terror Trial Given Fresh Instructions On Element Of Intent