Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Cars
  4. Mobile
  5. News

Uber’s surveillance feature tracks your location before and after your ride

Add as a preferred source on Google

According to Uber, the ridehailing company is trying to improve customer experience with its new location feature, but some riders may not appreciate being surveilled. In May Uber announced it would add rider location tracking and now the service can track riders before and after rides, according to Ars Technica.

With the service enabled, Uber will track your location from the time you originally request a ride until five minutes after the ride ends. The company says the information helps drivers find riders without making phone calls. Uber also uses the information to monitor driver service, making sure, for example, riders are picked up and dropped off on the proper side of the street.

Recommended Videos

Uber said in a statement, “We’re always thinking about ways we can improve the rider experience from sharpening our ETA estimates to identifying the best pick up location on any given street. Location is at the heart of the Uber experience, and we’re asking riders to provide us with more information to achieve these goals.”

You have control over whether or not you’ll be surveilled, however. So if you don’t want to be tracked and never allow it, Uber won’t track you. A new popup on the Uber app asks, “Allow ‘Uber’ to access our location even when you are not using the app?” The popup explains that from trip request through five minutes after the app will track the rider’s location, even if the app is in the background. You can click “Allow” or “Don’t Allow” in response to the request.

If you do turn on location access and later change your mind, the popup tells you where to find your phone’s device settings to disable surveillance here. With location services disabled, riders will need to enter pickup addresses manually.

If you’re okay with Uber knowing where you are before and for a few minutes after a ride but are concerned about others accessing that data, an agreement Uber made with New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman may ease your mind. Under that agreement, Uber protects all rider location data with multi-factor authentication and stores it in an encrypted format.

Bruce Brown
Bruce Brown Contributing Editor   As a Contributing Editor to the Auto teams at Digital Trends and TheManual.com, Bruce…
Google may finally ditch Samsung’s modem in the Pixel 11, and Tensor G6 could be better for it
FCC paperwork for Google’s next foldable points to MediaTek, raising hopes for lower power use and a cleaner break from Tensor’s Exynos roots
AI recreation of Pixel 11's Pixel Glow feature.

Google may be preparing its biggest Tensor hardware split yet. As spotted by Android Authority, FCC testing for an unreleased foldable Google phone includes a reference to MediaTek radio-frequency software, adding weight to reports that the Pixel 11’s Tensor G6 could leave Samsung’s Exynos modem behind.

Every previous Tensor chip has used Samsung modem hardware. Changing suppliers won’t guarantee better battery life or reception, but it gives Google a fresh path after years of leaning on the same underlying technology.

Read more
Apple’s iPhone Ultra could one-up the Galaxy Z Fold 7 with a bigger battery
4,883mAh total capacity, two cells, and two screens drawing power. Somewhere between "fine" and "I hope Apple's software does the heavy lifting."
Electronics, Phone, Mobile Phone

Apple's foldable iPhone is getting closer to its September announcement. Despite rumors of a delay, a recent report claimed that Foxconn is hiring temporary workers to ramp up production of the Ultra. Now we have a number for one of its most important specs: the battery.

I'll be honest: when I saw the battery figure, my reaction was somewhere between "that works" and "I was hoping for more."

Read more
The next “flagship killer” is coming from Motorola, but it may not reach the US anytime soon.
The Motorola Edge 70 Max looks great on paper, but only India is getting it on July 15.
Electronics, Mobile Phone, Phone

Motorola is building the most ambitious phone in its Edge 70 lineup, but it might not be available in the United States. 

Specs like a 7,000-nit display and MagSafe-style magnetic wireless charging belong in a conversation that often includes flagships, but it looks like Motorola wants to break that norm. 

Read more