Conversation

To be honest: I think this is difficult to solve. Bluetooth Scans actually *can* be used to pinpoint the exact location of someone. So Android asking for the location permission is actually the right thing to do. In this case it unfortunately creates a wrong impression for users.
Quote Tweet
Android's misleading permissions cause issues with the Corona app. To have BT access you need to grant location permission (on older devices). People are rightfully sceptical for location tracking with a government app.
Image
2
3
Replying to
It should be noted that the app is not requesting the location permission. The app is requesting permission to use the Play Services contact tracing API. Play Services needs location to be enabled for the device for that API to work, otherwise it can't scan the nearby devices.
2
5
Replying to and
Play Services has the location permission by default. There's no location permission being requested. Rather, it's asking the user to turn on location for the device, just like toggling it on in Settings or via the quick tile. It's not a permission request. If Play Services...
1
2
Replying to and
... wasn't simply a privileged app with certain permissions granted but rather could do whatever it wanted, then they could hide the fact that this depends on doing a form of location tracking. I think the scanning Play is doing should certainly be considered location tracking.
1
2
Show replies