Google Location-Tracking Surveillance Tactics Troubled Its Own Engineers, Unsealed Documents Show

Google's own engineers reportedly scolded the company for misleading people about how its location tracking settings worked.

Advertisement
By Associated Press | Updated: 27 August 2020 12:08 IST
Highlights
  • Google mislead people about how its location tracking settings worked
  • Google gained trust of billions of users with free services such as maps
  • The personal information Google collect is used to target ads
Google Location-Tracking Surveillance Tactics Troubled Its Own Engineers, Unsealed Documents Show

Google's internal emails were part of the released documents

Google's own engineers were troubled by the way the company secretly tracked the movements of people who didn't want to be followed until a 2018 Associated Press investigation uncovered the shadowy surveillance, according to unsealed documents in a consumer fraud case.

The behind-the-scenes peek stems from a three-month-old lawsuit against Google filed by Arizona's attorney general. The files, unsealed late last week, reveal that Google knew it had a massive problem on its hands after an AP article published in August 2018 explained how the company continued to track users' whereabouts even after they had disabled the feature Google called “location history.”

The released documents include internal Google emails and a fresh version of the state's civil complaint with fewer redactions than the original.

The same day the AP story was published, the company held what one unidentified email correspondent called an “Oh S—-” meeting to discuss its location tracking tools, according to the unsealed records in Arizona's Maricopa County Superior Court. Google also began monitoring public reaction to the AP story, including how it was trending across Facebook, Twitter and other influential online services, the documents show.

Advertisement

Some of Google's own engineers scolded the company for misleading people about how its location tracking settings worked. “I agree with the article," one engineer wrote in a particularly blunt assessment after the AP story was published. “Location off should mean location off, not except for this case or that case."

Another Google engineer wrote, “Indeed we aren't very good at explaining this to users." Another concurred that what the company was doing was “definitely confusing from a user point of view."

Advertisement

The release of the emails is embarrassing for a company that tries to build trust with billions of users of free services such as maps and online search, which in turn provide the personal information Google can use to target ads. Those ads generated more than $130 billion (roughly Rs. 966,209 crores) in revenue last year alone.

Google is still fighting to keep many of the exhibits and key passages in the lawsuit redacted on the grounds that the contents contain confidential information.

Advertisement

After the AP article on location tracking came out two years ago, Google made changes to its privacy settings to make it easier for users to conceal their movements.

But the revisions didn't deter Arizona Attorney General Mark Brnovich from opening an investigation that culminated in his suing Google three months ago. The complaint accuses Google of engaging in deceptive business practices that duped Arizona consumers, and could potentially result in billions of dollars of penalties if Brnovich prevails.

“The recently unsealed documents reveal statements from Google's own engineers that are in conflict with what the company has been representing to the public," Brnovich said in a Wednesday statement.

Google is seeking to dismiss the lawsuit, arguing that the Arizona law only applies to goods and services that charge consumers. That would exclude free services that draw upon the tracking tools that are at the heart of the lawsuit.

The company also contends that Brnovich, a Republican, may have been prodded to pursue the investigation by Oracle, which has been involved in a long-running legal battle over the rights to some of the software code used in Google's Android software for smartphones and other mobile devices.

“Privacy controls have long been built into our services and our teams work continuously to discuss and improve them," Google spokesperson Jose Castaneda said Wednesday. “In the case of location information, we've heard feedback, and have worked hard to improve our privacy controls."


Which are the best truly wireless earphones under Rs. 10,000? We discussed this on Orbital, our weekly technology podcast, which you can subscribe to via Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, or RSS, download the episode, or just hit the play button below.

Affiliate links may be automatically generated - see our ethics statement for details.
 

For the latest tech news and reviews, follow Gadgets 360 on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News. For the latest videos on gadgets and tech, subscribe to our YouTube channel. If you want to know everything about top influencers, follow our in-house Who'sThat360 on Instagram and YouTube.

Advertisement

Related Stories

Popular Mobile Brands
  1. Vivo X300 Pro Could Offer a 50-Megapixel Sony LYT-828 Sensor
  2. Donkey Kong Bananza, Grounded 2 and More: The Biggest Games in July
  3. Airtel Offers Free Year-Long Perplexity Pro Subscription to All Users
  1. Young Exoplanet Spotted Shedding Atmosphere Under Stellar Radiation
  2. Transverse Thomson Effect Observed Experimentally: Unlocking New Possibilities in Thermal Management
  3. China Launches Advanced Spacesuits and 7.2 Tons of Supplies to Tiangong Space Station
  4. Gravitational Waves Reveal Most Massive Black Hole Merger Ever Observed
  5. NASA’s Parker Probe Sends Closest-Ever Images from Inside the Sun’s Corona
  6. Uranus Found Emitting Internal Heat, Reviving Hopes for Flagship NASA Mission
  7. JWST Finds Black Hole Between Galaxy Cores, Hinting at Rare Direct Collapse Birth
  8. ESO Captures Clear Images of Interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS Using VLT
  9. Kaliyugam Now Streaming on SunNXT: Everything You Need to Know
  10. Slack Updated With AI-Powered Enterprise Search, Channel Recaps, Huddles AI Meeting Notes and Translations
Gadgets 360 is available in
Download Our Apps
Available in Hindi
© Copyright Red Pixels Ventures Limited 2025. All rights reserved.