Google can track you walking NEAR a crime and ‘alert police that you may be a suspect’
PRIVACY experts are concerned about Google location data being used by law enforcement to try and find crime suspects.
Police in the US have been known to take out something called a ‘geofence warrant’ that can result in Google handing over your data.
According to a report in , the Gainesville, Florida, police department requested Google hand over information about a man called Zachary McCoy after a routine bike ride took him past a crime scene.
McCoy was said to receive an alarming email from Google in January 2020 informing him that the police had requested his user data.
He had seven days to go to court if he wanted to block the release of his Google data.
It was later revealed that this request was due to a burglary that had happened at a home on his bike ride route in 2019.
Police had obtained McCoy’s Google location data at the time via a geofence warrant.
The connection between his location and the site of the crime meant the police wanted to access more data about McCoy.
Google recently revealed that it received 11,554 geofence location warrants from law enforcement last year.
It said 8,396 had been requested in 2019.
Caleb Kenyon, McCoy’s defense attorney, told : “As long as the data exists, all it takes is a creative law enforcement officer to say, ‘Hey, we can get a warrant or we can send a subpoena for this particular subset of the data that’s already being harvested.
“They’re coming up with everything they can to do their job. That’s all it takes for the next type of [reverse] search warrant to come about.”
Geofence warrants can lead to anyone who was near a crime scene becoming a suspect until further investigation rules them out.
There’s also been concerns raised about about keyword search warrants, which can be used to look for people who have searched a certain word or phrase online.
We have reached out to Google for comment.
- Read all the latest Phones & Gadgets news
- Keep up-to-date on Apple stories
- Get the latest on Facebook, WhatsApp and Instagram
Best Phone and Gadget tips and hacks
Looking for tips and hacks for your phone? Want to find those secret features within social media apps? We have you covered...
- How to get your deleted Instagram photos back
- How to track someone on Google Maps
- How can I increase my Snapchat score?
- How can I change my Facebook password?
- How can I do a duet on TikTok?
- Here’s how to see if your Gmail has been hacked
- How can I change my Amazon Alexa voice in seconds?
- What is dating app Bumble?
- How can I test my broadband internet speed?
- Here’s how to find your Sky TV remote in SECONDS
In other news, check out the new Lamborghini Huracan Evo that can clean your house and cook you dinner.
Check out the wildly impressive Panasonic 65HZ1000 TV, which makes most tellies look rubbish.
Read our complete guide to Call of Duty 2021.
And Dell’s Alienware R10 Ryzen Edition is a gaming PC powerhouse that crushes both the new consoles.
We pay for your stories! Do you have a story for The Sun Online Tech & Science team? Email us at tech@the-sun.co.uk