How does Gemini Code (Google) protect user data?
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Short Answer
Data protection in a Gemini Code (Google) app rests on Row Level Security (RLS) policies. Encryption is table-stakes (Gemini Code (Google)'s infra handles it), but who can *read* the decrypted data is where production Gemini Code (Google) apps succeed or fail.
Detailed Answer
Layer 1: Encryption (mostly handled for you)
Supabase encrypts data at rest by default and enforces TLS 1.2+ for all connections. You don't configure this — you verify it (HTTPS on your domain, no mixed content). Strong password hashing (bcrypt/argon2) is handled by Gemini Code (Google)'s auth provider if you use it, not if you roll your own. This layer rarely breaks.
Layer 2: Access control (where Gemini Code (Google) apps actually leak data)
Supabase Row Level Security is the authorization model for Gemini Code (Google) apps. A table without RLS is globally readable with the anon key. Every table needs policies of the form `(select auth.uid()) = user_id` enforced at the database layer — not the application layer. This is the layer that fails in real Gemini Code (Google) breaches.
Layer 3: Secret & credential handling
Gemini Code (Google) apps fail here predictably: service keys, third-party API keys, and admin credentials end up in frontend bundles. A service_role key in the browser bypasses all of Layer 2 by design.
Layer 4: Third-party data flow
Payment data (Stripe), analytics, email providers, webhooks — every integration is a data-protection question. Best pattern: keep sensitive data (PCI, PHI) off your servers entirely (Stripe Elements for card data, signed webhooks for integrations). Gemini Code (Google) apps that proxy payment data through their own backend have taken on PCI scope they don't need.
Layer 5: Compliance (GDPR, CCPA, HIPAA)
No platform makes your app compliant. You need: explicit consent UI, data export endpoint (JSON/CSV of a user's data), deletion endpoint that cascades correctly (including backups, audit logs, third-party copies), breach notification within 72 hours (GDPR Article 33), and records of processing activities. Gemini Code (Google) supports all of these at the infrastructure level; implementing them is app-level work.
The verification question
The single best test of "does Gemini Code (Google) protect my user data": use an incognito window, no login, and try to query your database endpoint directly (e.g., `curl https://your-project.supabase.co/rest/v1/users?select=*` with your anon key as the apikey header). If anything comes back that shouldn't, Layer 2 has failed. VAS runs this test programmatically across every endpoint.
Security Research & Statistics
of Lovable applications (170 out of 1,645) had exposed user data in the CVE-2025-48757 incident
Source: CVE-2025-48757 security advisory
average cost of a data breach in 2023
Source: IBM Cost of a Data Breach Report 2023
developers using vibe coding platforms like Lovable, Bolt, and Replit
Source: Combined platform statistics 2024-2025
Expert Perspectives
“There's a new kind of coding I call 'vibe coding', where you fully give in to the vibes, embrace exponentials, and forget that the code even exists.”
“Vibe coding your way to a production codebase is clearly risky. Most of the work we do as software engineers involves evolving existing systems, where the quality and understandability of the underlying code is crucial.”
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Does a Gemini Code (Google) app automatically comply with GDPR?
No. Gemini Code (Google)'s underlying infrastructure may be GDPR-compliant (meaning they handle data on your behalf correctly), but your app's GDPR compliance is separate: consent collection, data export, deletion, and breach notification are app-level obligations. A Gemini Code (Google) app can meet GDPR — none does "automatically."
Where is user data physically stored in a Gemini Code (Google) app?
Wherever you configured Supabase to store it. Supabase lets you select a region at project creation (US East, EU, AP, etc.); the primary data stays in that region, though there can be backups elsewhere depending on plan. Hosting (Vercel, Netlify, etc.) may serve cached static content from edge locations globally, but dynamic data reads go to the primary region. For regulatory claims (EU-only data residency), verify every component individually.
What do I do if data in my Gemini Code (Google) app is breached?
(1) Contain — rotate every credential the breach could have touched (even if you're not sure). (2) Measure — identify exactly which records were exposed, for how long, to how many actors. Supabase audit logs help; Postgres statement logs help more. (3) Fix — close the vulnerability that allowed the breach, verified with a scan. (4) Notify — GDPR requires 72 hours for "high risk" breaches; state laws vary for CCPA and similar. (5) Document — the post-mortem is a compliance artifact. Pre-breach scanning drops the probability of ever reaching step 4.
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