The Best Privacy-Friendly Alternatives to Google Maps

0

There are reasons why so many people use Google Maps: It’s arguably the easiest mapping service to use and has the most up-to-date data available. But it wouldn’t be a Google product if it didn’t collect lots of data about you. This can be collected through the Maps app, but also the GPS location settings of the phone that’s always in your pocket. As a result, there’s a lot Google knows about your whereabouts.

The extent of what Google knows can be seen on your location timeline. All the little red dots shown on the map reveal where you’ve been and when. For me, it shows 461 places that I visited before I turned the location settings off at the start of 2019. (The most common: predictably, my home and WIRED’s London office.)

If you want to turn off location data you can do this through your Google account here. There are also options to auto-delete future location history every three or 18 months. This will stop Google from gathering data about your location when you’re not using its services.

You may also want to turn off web tracking and activity, as other Google services and products can gather information about your location. “Location data may be saved as part of activity on Search and Maps when your Web & App Activity setting is on, and included in your photos depending on your camera app settings,” the company says.

Location data is different from the other types of data Google gathers about you: Using mapping services without giving away your location is pretty difficult. There’s one thing you can do on your phone to limit how much data Google Maps gathers: limit when Google Maps can access your location. Through Android and iOS settings you can limit Maps’ ability to access your location to when the app is in use, rather than at all times.

A truly private maps service doesn’t really exist for every platform. But there are other options out there that don’t store and gather as much of your data or feed it back into a larger profile of you. Here are the alternatives you could consider, and we’ve highlighted where there may be potential privacy trade-offs you have to make.

OpenStreetMap

OpenStreetMap is the Wikipedia of apps—it’s built by the people who use it and all the information is open data, meaning anyone can reuse the maps for anything. It’s kept up to date by people using GPS devices, aerial photography, and other free sources of information. If you go somewhere and the map isn’t correct, then you can create an account and suggest changes.

There aren’t many fancy features, but it’ll give you directions (via car, bike, or foot) and is run by a nonprofit organization. Its privacy policy says some limited data is collected but this isn’t linked to user profiles. You don’t have to log in to use it and there are also no ads of any sort.

OpenStreetMap is largely web-based. It is optimized for smartphones, but there aren’t any official apps provided by the OpenStreetMap Foundation. There are, however, third-party apps that use its data. These tend to come with trade-offs. Maps.Me has downloadable maps that can be used offline, but also has adverts.

OsmAnd

This mapping app is created using OpenStreetMap’s data but it also comes with a host of extra options you can use. These include map downloads for offline use, travel guides, and ski maps.

There are no ads within the app, but the firm says it “aggregates non-personal data which cannot identify a user.” This can include how often it is used, the model of your phone, and the countries where it is downloaded. The firm’s privacy policy says it “does not collect, store, process or transfer any personal information of users besides the cases when such information is provided by the users with their clear consent.”

Apple Maps

This, naturally, only applies if you’re using iOS. However, Apple has gone further than almost any other company to make its mapping app private. It’s the most privacy-friendly Google alternative out there. Apple’s Maps are much improved since the initial accuracy flaws it had when it launched back in 2012.

Apple Maps doesn’t link data to your Apple ID and any information is connected to random identifiers, which periodically reset themselves. It also works to obscure your map’s search data. “Maps converts the precise location where your search originated to a less exact one after 24 hours,” the company says. “Apple doesn’t retain a history of what you’ve searched for or where you’ve been.” And when you save locations across devices it uses end-to-end encryption so the company can’t access them.

Here

If you want to use a maps app provided by established house-hold names, Here is probably your best option. It is owned by a consortium of car brands, including Audi, BMW, and Daimler. As a result there’s a large focus on location and navigation services but it also sells mapping content to firms such as Amazon and Garmin.

Maps are detailed and there’s the option to download them for offline use and also a driving and navigation mode. However, it comes with data trade-offs. Here’s privacy policy says it uses random identifiers tied to your personal data that don’t identify you. However, the company may show you location and behaviorally based advertisements. “For example if you ask for weather information you may be served with advertising content tailored to that location,” the privacy policy states. The company may “use and/or share your non-personal data” without any restrictions with its existing or future “business partners, researchers and advertisers.”

This article first appeared in  www.wired.com

Seeking to build and grow your brand using the force of consumer insight, strategic foresight, creative disruption and technology prowess? Talk to us at +971 50 6254340 or mail: engage@groupisd.com or visit www.groupisd.com/story

About Author

Comments are closed.