How not to get caught in law-enforcement geofence requests

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I thought I’d write up a response to this question from well-known 4th Amendment and CFAA lawyer Orin Kerr:

First, let me address the second part of his tweet, whether I’m technically qualified to answer this. I’m not sure, I have only 80% confidence that I am. Hence, I’m writing this answer as blogpost hoping people will correct me if I’m wrong.

There is a simple answer and it’s this: just disable “Location” tracking in the settings on the phone. Both iPhone and Android have a one-click button to tap that disables everything.

The trick is knowing which thing to disable. On the iPhone it’s called “Location Services”. On the Android, it’s simply called “Location”.

If you do start googling around for answers, you’ll find articles upset that Google is still tracking them. That’s because they disabled “Location History” and not “Location”. This left ”

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