Comment on ‘If I switch it off, my girlfriend might think I’m cheating’: inside the rise of couples location sharing

<- View Parent
WhyJiffie@sh.itjust.works ⁨2⁩ ⁨days⁩ ago

This has nothing to do with the tracking.

what is “this”? location sharing apps? if yes, why do you think these are unrelated?

You should have the same problem with anyone that has location turned on in their phone.

I don’t care about a random person having location turned on. why should I? there’s plenty of offline uses for that function, I use it regularly. maps, sports tracking, reminders, …

, as we use Google maps to navigate as is. I reject the premise that I’m violating someone else’s privacy by doing so.

that’s ok, when it only affects you. but when you are navigating to a friend’s place, with this thinking you are just ignorant about what is actually happening. I’m genuinely sorry to point this out.

this is a bit similar to when people refuse the fact that by uploading a picture of someone to facebook they might be violating their privacy.
or when people haphazardly allow contacts access to random apps, or to apps like facebook messenger because it asks so nicely, and then disclaim responsibility over where does that contact information go.

You certainly wouldn’t have the right to ask someone to turn something like that off simply because you don’t trust the corporations on the other end,

not just the corporations, but the tech hygiene of the average person. I am aware that it sounds bad, and I hate it that it is warranted.

source
Sort:hotnewtop