However, the trade-off is that the tech giant has to know a lot about you. It’s no secret that Google monitors and stores a lot of information about you, such as your location history. It does this for two reasons: service improvement and targeted advertising. In other words, you have to be comfortable with Google knowing where you are if you want it to help without you asking. Google does provide tools and options to turn location tracking off; however, new findings indicate that the company still records your movements even when you tell it not to. Now, that’s creepy, right? Read and see why this is happening and see how to stop Google from tracking your location for real.
Google stores your location even when you tell it not to
It was recently discovered that plenty of Google services on iPhones and Android gadgets still store your location data even if you’ve tweaked your privacy settings to prevent it from recording your location. This means that even if you turn off Location History on your account, it was found that some of the company’s apps still store time-stamped location data even without your permission. If you’re doubting these claims, well, a team of researchers at Princeton have confirmed these findings.
Privacy dangers
This privacy issue affects all 2 billion Android users and millions of iOS users who use Google services on their gadgets. Princeton’s researcher Gunes Acar demonstrated how these location markers can reveal tons of information about your movements even if you turn off “location tracking” on your Google account. With his Android phone’s Location History set to off, his Google activity still mapped out two train trips and visits to specific places.
Turn off Google location tracking for real with these steps:
However, Google said that people still have an option to turn pervasive location tracking and histories within its services off, after all. “There are a number of different ways that Google may use location to improve people’s experience, including Location History, Web and App Activity, and through device-level Location Services,” a Google spokesperson told AP. “We provide clear descriptions of these tools, and robust controls so people can turn them on or off, and delete their histories at any time.” It’s not as straightforward as it should be though. Turn off Web and App Activity: First, you need to be signed in to your Google Account then click on “Your personal info” in the “Personal info & Privacy” section.
Now, on the left-hand pane, click on “Manage your Google Activity” then select “Go To Activity Controls.”
Here you can turn off the different types of data that are being saved to your Google account. It turns out, pausing “Location History” doesn’t completely turn off Google’s location markers. Although it stops Google from adding your movements to your “Timeline,” location data is still being saved on your “Web and App Activity.” Click here to see what your Google accounts Timeline is all about.
To prevent location markers from being saved, you have to pause your “Web and App Activity” toggle too. When this feature is paused, activity from all of your Google services won’t be saved on your account. It’s not exactly clear cut, is it?
Is the setting misleading?
Is Google’s Location History setting confusing on purpose? While Google provides a description of how it works, it only appears when you turn the feature off. The description might contain the disclaimer that “some location data may be saved as part of your activity on other Google services, like Search and Maps” but it is hard to miss. Re-enabling “Web & App Activity” tracking also reveals the same disclaimer that the feature, “saves the things you do on Google sites, apps, and services … and associated information, like location.” It gets more confusing on phones since turning off Location History on your Google apps only state that location data won’t be added to your Location History map but it’s unclear whether your movements are still being saved to your Google account history. Again, to turn location activity tracking off, you’ll have to dig into your settings and turn them all off via your account’s Activity Controls. But what do you think? Is Google overstepping its bounds with its location tracking? Shouldn’t “off” mean off all the time? Drop us a comment!