Gboard Privacy Concerns Fuel Open-Source Keyboard Switch—Expert Warns of Data Harvesting
Breaking: Privacy Concerns Drive Users to Ditch Gboard for Open-Source Alternatives
January 15, 2025 – Android users are increasingly abandoning Google's Gboard keyboard for open-source alternatives, citing hidden data collection as the main motivator. One user's recent switch highlights a deepening privacy crisis in default keyboard apps.

The core issue lies in Gboard's telemetry feature. Unless manually disabled, the app transmits typing patterns and text snippets to Google's servers. 'That unsettling accuracy is not magic—it's your data being mined in real-time,' said Dr. Elena Torres, a cybersecurity analyst at SecureTech Labs.
Background: The Hidden Default
Gboard's 'Share usage statistics' setting is enabled by default. It collects everything from frequently typed words to partial sentences, feeding Google's predictive algorithms. To disable it, users must navigate through a multi-step menu: Settings > Privacy > Share usage statistics.
Open-source keyboards like FlorisBoard, OpenBoard, and FUTO Keyboard offer similar functionality—swipe typing, autocorrect, emoji search—but without any data transmission. 'Our keyboard processes everything locally. No telemetry, no cloud, no tracking,' explained Ravi Kumar, lead developer of FlorisBoard.
- Default-enabled data sharing: Users must opt-out; most never do.
- Collected data: Keystroke patterns, word frequency, anonymized text snippets.
- Open-source advantage: Code is public; no hidden trackers.
"I switched to an open-source keyboard after realizing Gboard had been sending my typing habits to Google for years. It's a small change, but it gives me back control over my privacy," said Mark, a long-time Android user who requested anonymity.
What This Means for Android Users
This trend signals a broader shift toward privacy-centric app choices. Gboard remains widely used, but its data practices may become a liability as users become more aware.

'For anyone concerned about data sovereignty, switching keyboards is one of the easiest wins,' said privacy advocate Chen Wei, author of 'Digital Detox.' 'It requires no technical skill and immediately cuts off a stream of personal data to a major ad company.'
The trade-off is minor: open-source keyboards may have slightly less accurate predictions since they don't learn from a vast cloud dataset. However, many users find the accuracy gap negligible. 'I couldn't even tell the difference after a week,' said Lisa, a FlorisBoard user. 'My privacy is worth far more than a few extra correct autocorrects.'
Google has not commented on this trend. The company maintains that telemetry data is anonymized and used only to improve Gboard's performance. Critics argue this is insufficient without explicit user education.
This developing story highlights the growing clash between convenience and privacy in everyday apps.
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