The Happiness Project

How to Delete The Happiness Project. save (197.54 MB)

Published by UCL

We have made it super easy to delete The Happiness Project account and/or app.

Guide to Delete The Happiness Project πŸ‘‡

Things to note before removing The Happiness Project:

  1. The developer of The Happiness Project is UCL and all inquiries must go to them.
  2. Check the Terms of Services and/or Privacy policy of UCL to know if they support self-serve subscription cancellation:
  3. The GDPR gives EU and UK residents a "right to erasure" meaning that you can request app developers like UCL to delete all your data it holds. UCL must comply within 1 month.
  4. The CCPA lets American residents request that UCL deletes your data or risk incurring a fine (upto $7,500 dollars).


Data The Happiness Project Collected from You πŸ”
  1. Data Not Linked to You: The following data may be collected but it is not linked to your identity:
    • Identifiers
    • Usage Data

     

β†ͺ️ Steps to delete The Happiness Project account:

1: Visit the The Happiness Project website directly Here →

2:   Contact The Happiness Project Support/ Customer Service:

  1. 100% Contact Match


  2. 100% Contact Match


  3. Support channel
  4. Vist Terms/Privacy


Deleting from Smartphone πŸ“±


Delete on iPhone:


  1. On your homescreen, Tap and hold The Happiness Project until it starts shaking.
  2. Once it starts to shake, you'll see an X Mark at the top of the app icon.
  3. Click on that X to delete the The Happiness Project app.

Delete on Android:


  1. Open your GooglePlay app and goto the menu.
  2. Click "My Apps and Games" » then "Installed".
  3. Choose The Happiness Project, » then click "Uninstall".

Have a Problem with The Happiness Project? Report Issue




🎌 About The Happiness Project


1. Created by scientists at UCL and Yale, this app is a citizen science project taking psychology and neuroscience experiments from the lab to your smartphone.

2. Every 3-minute game that you finish contributes data to real scientific research about how the brain works.

3. The anonymous surveys help us see what causes well-being and understand mental health conditions like anxiety and depression.

4. This citizen science project was supported by the UK Medical Research Council.

5. Dr Robb Rutledge (Yale Psychology) says: "We all want to know what determines happiness.

6. It’s hard to figure it out! In our games, we ask people about their happiness as they make decisions in different situations.



Alternative apps you can try: