Comment on Fitness app Strava gives away location of Biden, Trump and other leaders, French newspaper says.

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sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works ⁨2⁩ ⁨weeks⁩ ago

From the article:

Le Monde found that some U.S. Secret Service agents use the Strava fitness app.

Le Monde also found Strava users among the security staff for French President Emmanuel Macron and Russian President Vladimir Putin. In one example, Le Monde traced the Strava movements of Macron’s bodyguards to determine that the French leader spent a weekend in the Normandy seaside resort of Honfleur in 2021. The trip was meant to be private and wasn’t listed on the president’s official agenda.

So yes, they basically did a bit of journalism to figure out who the bodyguards were, and looked them up on the app.

Is there an option to set your profile to private?

Yes, but I’m not sure what workarounds exist to view private data. Here’s a forum post about it:

Profile set to “Followers”

  • You must approve or deny Strava community members before they can follow you. You can find out more about managing your follow requests in our previous tip: How to approve or deny Strava follower requests.
  • Non-Followers who are logged in to Strava will be unable to see your full profile.
  • A logged out version of your profile won’t be available on the internet.

I’m not sure what “full profile” vs “partial profile” means in this case, but there is a setting for it. I set mine to private when I used it some years ago, but I bailed because I honestly didn’t find much value in it. I mostly used it for route planning, but eventually found a better app for it when they changed what features are part of the free vs paid tiers (and that impacted route planning IIRC).

Regardless, a bodyguard to an important individual like a head of state/government shouldn’t be using anything that tracks location, regardless of what the policies of the app are. Keep that on personal devices, and leave those behind when doing a job w/ an important person.

Though just carrying a cell phone at all gives some people access to your full location information, if they care to track it.

Sure, network operators certainly have access, and there’s a good argument that only short-range radios should be used by security professionals when on an assignment. If they must carry a phone, it should probably have the radios disabled, or they should have some tech in place to change where they appear to be located (e.g. repeaters).

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