Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Tablets
  3. Mobile
  4. Legacy Archives

How to encrypt your iOS device’s location data in four easy steps

Add as a preferred source on Google

Earlier today, we learned that users of iOS devices are secretly being tracked by their the own iPhones and iPads. Their location data is being stored in an unencrypted file, potentially accessible by anyone possessing some basic technical knowledge and a sinister motive. When an iPhone or iPad is connected to a computer, that data file is transferred to the computer along with other, more innocuous information.

As of yet, there’s no way to prevent your iPhone or iPad from storing the location data, short of deleting all of your backed-up information (i.e. contacts, settings and text messages), a real pain if you ever happen to lose your phone. Speaking of losing your phone, consider that if it does wind up in someone else’s hands, they’ll have easy access to a tidy record of all the places you’ve been, potentially stretching back nearly a year.

Recommended Videos

With no easy fix out there, there is one way to make your location information substantially more secure by simply encrypting your backed-up information. By default, iTunes backups are stored in an unencrypted file. Business Insider provided this handy step-by-step process to encrypt your iOS device’s backup files:

  • Connect your iPad or iPhone to the computer you normally use to synch your device.
  • Select the device in iTunes to bring up the summary screen.
  • Scroll down to the bottom of the page and select the box next to “Encrypt iPhone [or iPad] backup.”
  • Then, set the password that will be used to access your device’s backups.

Note that this procedure only encrypts backups. The original files, as we understand it, remain unencrypted while on the device itself.


(image source)

Aemon Malone
Former Digital Trends Contributor
The OLED iPad mini might miss the one upgrade fans wanted most
Home screen layout of the 2024 iPad mini.

If you've been holding off on buying an iPad mini because you were hoping Apple's first OLED model would finally get a smoother display, you may want to temper your expectations.

A prettier screen, but not necessarily a faster one

Read more
Huawei’s MatePad Air finally comes out of China and it makes the iPad Air feel inadequate
Huawei just showed what “Air” should include
Huawei MatePad Air being used with a stylus

Apple’s iPad Air remains one of the easiest tablets to recommend, largely thanks to its powerful M4 processor and excellent app ecosystem. Huawei’s latest MatePad Air has now left China, and its hardware makes Apple’s mid-range tablet look surprisingly under-equipped in some areas.

The 2026 Huawei MatePad Air will go on sale in select global markets on August 1. Prices start at 849 euros for an 8GB and 256GB model with the Smart Magnetic Keyboard included. A PaperMatte version with either the keyboard or M-Pencil Pro costs 899 euros, while the 12GB model reaches 999 euros. This arrives just days after Huawei unveiled the MatePad Pro.

Read more
Apple could launch two new Apple Pencils next spring alongside the iPad Pro
Bloomberg reports that two refreshed styluses are planned for next spring's iPad Pro launch
Apple Pencil featured

Apple's next iPad Pro refresh might not be the only hardware getting an upgrade. According to Bloomberg's Mark Gurman, Apple is preparing two new Apple Pencil models for launch next spring. The lineup is said to include a refreshed Apple Pencil Pro alongside an updated version of the more affordable USB-C Apple Pencil, with both expected to debut alongside the next-generation iPad Pro.

A refresh for both ends of the lineup

Read more