No, from what I can tell it is them asking not to be sued to for providing the service they signed up for. That is, looking at your social media profiles to verify your identity across profiles.
Even if it did mean that, it would be of 0 use to them because they are fully end-to-end encrypted
I have recently given up Google and most of it's products. And I find some of the things on this list are not relevant for the average person. Here is my personal list:
Google Search (DuckDuckGo)
Gmail (ProtonMail)
YouTube (There's pretty much nothing because of the networking effect YouTube has. But, if you just want something to share videos, there's Media Goblin)
Google Drive (NextCloud)
Google Keep (Wallabag/Pocket)
Google Maps (OpenStreetMap)
Google Calendar & Contacts (NextCloud)
Google Docs (LibreOffice Online)