Sports · Privacy report
Ballpark icon
MLB Ballpark
Free · ★4.7 · MLB

Is Ballpark safe?

It collects a lot of your data itself.

Our take. Its own App Store privacy label declares Ballpark links 9 categories of your data to your identity, and shares data to track you across other companies apps and websites, including purchases, financial info, location and contact info. That collection, more than any outside tracker, is the story here.

Privacy footprint · vs 117 sportsHeavy
Trackers from other companies4 · some
typical sports: 5
Data the app links to you9 types · a lot
typical sports: 4 · from its own privacy label
What it collects about you

Ballpark links 9 categories of your data to you.

From the developer's own App Store privacy label. These are the kinds of data Ballpark ties to your identity, and it also declares it shares data to track you across other apps.

PurchasesFinancial InfoLocationContact InfoContactsUser ContentIdentifiersUsage DataDiagnostics
Who else is inside

It carries trackers from 2 companies.

Third-party SDKs found in the app, matched to the company that publishes each. Present in the code; we do not observe what they transmit.

🇺🇸GoogleAnalytics
Firebase, AdMob and Google analytics SDKs, built to record how you use the app and serve ads.
2
SDKs
🏢Other third partiesadvertising
A third-party SDK.
2
SDKs
How it compares

Where it sits among sports.

Every one of these apps we have scanned, on the two measures above: third-party trackers it carries (across) and data it links to you on its own label (up). Toward the top right is more invasive.

Each dot is one sport app. Ballpark sits high on the left: it collects a lot itself but uses few outside trackers.

Other signals

One more flag.

Each is a fact read straight from the app. The same checks run on every app we scan. Only the ones that apply here are shown.

!

It declares cross-app tracking

Its own App Store label says it tracks you across other companies apps and websites using your advertising identifier.

The evidence

What it's built from.

All 18 SDKs in the app, grouped by what they are for. 4 are third-party trackers.

2
2
1
13
2advertising
2analytics
1push & messaging
13standard libraries

4 of the 18 are third-party trackers. One is a push-notification SDK that delivers notifications, rather than tracking you across apps. The rest are the app's own code and standard open-source building blocks.

Show the full SDK list
GoogleAnalytics · USA
Google AdMob · Firebase Analytics
Other third partiesadvertising
Google UMP (Consent) · Google App Measurement
Push & messaging1 · notifications
OneSignal
Standard libraries13 · on-device
The app's own code plus open-source interface, storage and networking libraries.

How we know this

Counterspy downloads the app from the App Store and statically analyzes its compiled binary. Embedded SDKs are matched against a signature database and resolved to the company that operates each. We also read the developer's App Store privacy label, which lists the data the app says it collects and links to you. We do not run the app or intercept its traffic, so we report capabilities present in the code and the developer's own disclosures, not proven transmission. We assess privacy and data collection, not malware, security flaws, or developer intent. Reports are automated and never edited for payment. Scan v15.3.0, 2026-04-03.

  1. Third-party trackers are advertising, analytics and attribution SDKs detected by static signature matching. Presence shows a capability is compiled in, not that it ran or transmitted data.
  2. "Data the app links to you" is the count of data categories the developer declares as Data Linked To You in its App Store privacy label. Labels are self-reported and not verified by Apple.
  3. Comparison across the 117 sports in our corpus. Trackers: median 5. Data linked to you: median 4.