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by quesera 1280 days ago
Summarizing: If you run the Google Maps app on your iOS device, Google will build a correlation between your IP address and your GPS+ location.

You can turn off Location Services access for Google apps, if you feel the need to run them at all. Adding a few seconds of panning and zooming is a reasonable trade.

> (Google Maps app is) one of the few ways of checking restaurant reviews

Apple Maps has restaurant reviews also, if you can stomach Yelp. Google Maps also works in mobile Safari, if you'd prefer to sandbox Google code from your hardware (and again, you do not need to allow access to your location).

There is no path forward that permits both "I don't accept Google's data practices" and "I allow Location Services for Google mobile apps on my iOS device". :)

5 comments

I think Apple Maps looks to be starting to accumulate its own set of reviews. It has a ratings feature where you can review overall thumbs up or thumbs down and can upload your own photos of the place. It contributes to apple using your AppleID email. There's small fine print

> Ratings and photos are associated with your Apple ID. By contributing you agree to the Terms > https://www.apple.com/legal/internet-services/maps/ratings-p...

I think Apple Maps looks to be starting to accumulate its own set of reviews.

It is. I get a thing in Apple Maps that asks me for reviews of places I look up.

I'm more tolerant than the average bear, so I don't submit reviews. I also don't read reviews, because I don't find any value in them. Again, because I think I have different needs and expectations of the world.

I think it's limited to certain individuals right now. I don't know how I got selected. Maybe because my local Starbucks is constantly changing its hours, and I'm constantly sending the updates to Apple Maps.

Interesting, they want location data to confirm presence at a given spot.

> or not post a Submission that has location data removed or where Apple is unable to verify the location.

> There is no path forward that permits both "I don't accept Google's data practices" and "I allow Location Services for Google mobile apps on my iOS device". :)

in my case I have a family member sharing my VPN endpoint (DNS blocking does wonders on iOS) - which was part of the initial puzzle as I didn't use any google services at that point.

Not a path forward but a workaround - rotate the IP periodically and start "fresh".

>You can turn off Location Services access for Google apps, if you feel the need to run them at all. Adding a few seconds of panning and zooming is a reasonable trade.

That's not workable if you need it for turn-by-turn directions, which is a pretty common use case.

I do use Google Maps, but I don't like tracking. Is it easy to turn off tracking and still receive full mapping services?
I do use Google Maps, but don't like tracking. Is there a way to shut trackingand still receive full Maps service?