Skip to main content

Facebook reportedly developing a friend tracking app

Image used with permission by copyright holder

Privacy advocates must surely be girding their loins even as we speak. Bloomberg is now reporting that Facebook is preparing to release a friend finder app that will track your location.

According to “two people with knowledge of the matter,” the new app will see release in mid-March, and will leverage Facebook’s Nearby functionality to serve as an always-on tracker that will let users find their friends via their smartphones. Such a service would allow people to connect at local events or, you know, flat out stalk one another as they see fit. And, of course, Facebook can use your location to better serve more relevant ads.

The app is already drawing comparisons to similar products like Apple’s Find My Friends, Google Latitude, and last year’s SXSW darling Highlight. Even Foursquare’s Radar feature allows people to track what venues their friends are going to in real-time. Yet no solution has managed to break into the mainstream as users may be wary about how their location data might be abused.

However, according to Facebook’s recently-announced fourth quarter earnings, mobile users are now outnumbering desktop users for the first time. For a “mobile first” company with 1 billion active users (and one that hinted at mobile experiences being a focus in the coming year), this move could make GPS tracking among users a real trend.

Privacy analysts may have some reason to worry. Despite Facebook devoting 10 percent of their server power to privacy issues, it remains unclear if the company will allow users to opt out of the feature. What’s more, Facebook reserves the right to retain your location data so long as it deems it useful for its services. The app could be seen as a privacy nightmare if it suffers a security breach that compromises users’ locations.

Or not. It all hinges on how people decide to use the app when it lands in March. If opting out is available, it might be D.O.A.

Editors' Recommendations

Kwame Opam
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Kwame graduated from Stony Brook University with BA in Anthropology and has a Masters in Media Studies. He's done stints at…
I compared Google and Samsung’s AI photo-editing tools. It’s not even close
A person holding the Samsung Galaxy S24 Ultra and Google Pixel 8 Pro.

The Samsung Galaxy S24 Ultra (left) and Google Pixel 8 Pro Andy Boxall / Digital Trends

Most phones nowadays are equipped with dual lens or triple lens camera systems and have powerful photo-editing tools baked natively into the software. This means most people have a compact photo-editing suite in their pocket every day.

Read more
The Galaxy Z Fold 6 and Flip 6 release date just leaked
Two Galaxy Z Fold 5 phones next to each other -- one is open and one is closed.

The Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 5 (left) and Galaxy Z Flip 5 Andrew Martonik / Digital Trends

Samsung is just months away from its next Unpacked event, where it will announce the previously teased Galaxy Ring alongside the next Galaxy Z Fold and Z Flip phones. The event, which could have the most number of devices launching at one Samsung event, is set a couple weeks ahead of last year's event.

Read more
Forget about the TikTok ban; now the U.S. might ban DJI
The DJI Mavic 3 Classic top view in flight

The specter of a U.S. market ban is once again looming over DJI, the biggest drone camera maker in the world. “DJI is on a Defense Department list of Chinese military companies whose products the U.S. armed forces will be prohibited from purchasing in the future,” reports The New York Times.

The defense budget for 2024 mentions a possible ban on importing DJI camera gear for federal agencies and government-funded programs. In 2021, the U.S. Treasury Department put DJI on a list of companies suspected of having ties to the Chinese military and alleged complicity in the surveillance of a minority group, culminating in investment and export restrictions.

Read more