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Android Users Need To Delete Google Maps and Google Play If They Don't Want Their Locations Tracked (theregister.co.uk)

Kieren McCarthy, reporting for The Register: Google, it seems, is very, very interested in knowing where you are at all times. Users have reported battery life issues with the latest Android build, with many pointing the finger at Google Play -- Google's app store -- and its persistent, almost obsessive need to check where you are. Amid complaints that Google Play is always switching on GPS, it appears Google has made it impossible to prevent the app store from tracking your whereabouts unless you completely kill off location tracking for all applications. You can try to deny Google Play access to your handheld's location by opening the Settings app and digging through Apps -> Google Play Store -> Permissions, and flipping the switch for "location." But you'll be told you can't just shut out Google Play services: you have to switch off location services for all apps if you want to block the store from knowing your whereabouts. It's all or nothing, which isn't particularly nice. This is because Google Play services pass on your location to installed apps via an API. The store also sends your whereabouts to Google to process. Google doesn't want you to turn this off.

22 of 395 comments (clear)

  1. Why is this a problem? by Mike+Van+Pelt · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I love Big Brother. Don't you love Big Brother? Maybe you need re-education.

    1. Re:Why is this a problem? by cant_get_a_good_nick · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It's doubleplus don't be evil.

      Didn't Sergei grow up in the Moscow? He's built a panopticon that would make Stalin drool.

    2. Re:Why is this a problem? by Luthair · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Cellular companies already do it ;)

    3. Re:Why is this a problem? by ADRA · · Score: 3, Insightful

      They can legally (or illegally) get it anyway. You either live on grid or off. Trying to achieve one-foot-in-one-foot-out is an exercise in futility.

      --
      Bye!
    4. Re:Why is this a problem? by GLowder · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Ever been driving down the road and you get a message pop up about a 12 minute delay just ahead? Google saw everyone else's phones come to a stop/near-stop on the road ahead and is busy trying to help you route around it. Is that good? Bad? I don't know the answer but I find it convenient more than I find it obtrusive as I generally don't care if Google knows where I am.

      --
      I used to have a good sig...
    5. Re:Why is this a problem? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

      Exactly. And most of the people bleating about the "invasion" of privacy (honestly, it's 2016, it's not an invasion anymore) are the same people who then fire up Google Maps to check traffic conditions - a feature populated, for the most part, by the same feature they're working so hard to opt out of.

    6. Re:Why is this a problem? by dfghjk · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Always love these tone-deaf comments. Since rape is inevitable, you might as well enjoy it.

    7. Re:Why is this a problem? by brantondaveperson · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If Apple did this, there would be a slashdot outcry. So it goes.

  2. Clarification by LichtSpektren · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If I have my GPS turned off, is it still recording my location? Or is the article saying that it records your location if the GPS is on, even if you're not actively using Maps? Big difference there.

  3. Just the beginning by somenickname · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It won't be long before they start selling intrusive ads based on location, time of day, etc. It's around lunch time and you're walking on the street? Your phone buzzes to recommend a restaurant for you. That kind of advertisement could be sold to restaurants based on location, time of day, implied salary, whether you frequent a competitor, etc.

  4. Re:Yes because Android is so useful without softwa by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    To be obnoxious, I've never actually given any app my location on my phone. And I use Google Maps often enough. But rather than using it for navigation, I use it for -- you'll never guess -- looking at maps. No facepalm needed!

  5. Re:Fake GPS location spoofer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    software. on the phone. spoofing.

    he's not saying hey i'm gonna try and fake a half dozen satellites using a swarm drones or something hovering around him and his phone. ...

  6. Re:google play was already denied gps on my phone by tsqr · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I followed the instructions to turn off google play's permission to use my location, but this was already turned off. Am I missing something? The article only says the "latest Android build".

    Are you positive that "Location" wasn't already turned off in Settings when you went to look at Google Play Services permissions? On my phone (6.0.1), if Location is turned on and I try to set Google Play Services location permission to "off", I get a popup informing me that Google Play Services is the source of location services for all other applications, and that if I want to deny location privileges to Google Play, I have to turn off Location (in Settings). If Location is turned off, the location permission is off in Google Play Services.

  7. And people complain about Windows 10? by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This is why I've said over and over... Anyone who complains about Windows 10 thinking that it is the "big bad" when it comes to privacy simply hasn't been paying attention...

    That doesn't make Windows 10 spying all good, it just puts it into the same league as Apple and Google...

    1. Re:And people complain about Windows 10? by yodleboy · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Which is exactly what I said when the W10 telemetry noise started here on /. MS just looked at Apple and Google collecting craploads of data with hardly a peep from their users and said "hey let's do that too". I wasn't thrilled they did it, but wasn't very surprised. I wonder if some of the more rabid posters on ./ really believe that MS is doing something more nefarious with the data they collect than anyone else? MS is playing catch up, the nefarious use is already happening elsewhere.

  8. Re: Fake GPS location spoofer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Try to understand. Google is a company. They need to make money.

    They made their money when I bought the goddamn phone. If they don't feel like they made *enough* money, they should have charged more for the phone and/or licensing Android, not spying and selling out and digitally violating all of their users 24 hours a day.

  9. No, they didn't. $15 Android phone vs $650 by raymorris · · Score: 4, Insightful

    > They made their money when I bought the goddamn phone.

    No, no they didn't. Google doesn't charge money for Android. That's why you can get an Android phone for $15. They made nothing when you bought your phone. They make money while you use your phone.

    If you prefer to pay for your phone in cash at the time of purchase, you can buy an iPhone for $650. Apple makes money when you buy your phone.

    Of course, the iPhone also tracks you by default, but by paying $650 you can turn location tracking off. Well you can turn it off completely on Android too, but anyway, no Google didn't make money when you bought your phone. The store you bought it from made money, the company that made the phone made money, hell even Microsoft made money, not so much Google.

  10. Re: Fake GPS location spoofer by farble1670 · · Score: 1, Insightful

    They made their money when I bought the goddamn phone. If they don't feel like they made *enough* money, they should have charged more for the phone and/or licensing Android, not spying and selling out and digitally violating all of their users 24 hours a day.

    That's not their business model. If you don't like their business model, don't buy their product. I know, it's not as much fun as whining about it here, but trust me it's more effective.

  11. Re: Fake GPS location spoofer by farble1670 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Because due to the way that capitalism corrodes market choice and reduces product quality, I have two viable choices for a smartphone

    Translation: you want to have your cake and eat it too. No one owes you anything. You are not entitled to cheap wonderful smart phones. There's nothing in the Bill of Rights guaranteeing all citizens cheap, wonderful, feature rich smart phones. There are products on the market. Some gather usage stats. Others have more walled gardens than others. Others yet are more expensive and less feature rich. You get to choose one of these based on your criteria.

    Why don't you look into Ubuntu phones? http://www.ubuntu.com/phone

    What a wonderful 1st world problem we have here huh?

  12. Re: Fake GPS location spoofer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

    This should be modded way down. "Not buying the product" on an individual level does SHIT to change corporate behavior.

  13. Re: Fake GPS location spoofer by farble1670 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This should be modded way down. "Not buying the product" on an individual level does SHIT to change corporate behavior.

    Yes you are right. Keep buying their shit and giving them money, but come here and whine about it. You know how to affect change. You are truly a revolutionary my friend.

    Plus, giving up that fancy smartphone would be HARD. No Angry Birds. No Snapchat. It's not a life worth living.

  14. Re:Why do all the suckers put up with this. by thegarbz · · Score: 3, Insightful

    with no way to have a usable phone and usable maps

    Oh? So you want to use a company's services and all they provide without giving back? There are plenty of usable maps out there. There are plenty of phones on the market which don't have Google Services (which 1bn Chinese people don't even have access to).

    You can't have it all ways.