Half of Spaniards fear being tracked by GPS
Half of Spaniards fear being tracked by GPS
Internet users refuse to share their location for fear of attacks
Geolocation, according to its definition, is the ability to obtain the real geographical location of an object, such as a radar, a mobile phone or a computer connected to the Internet. A functionality that allows knowing almost exactly the position of a person.
That is why the Spanish have shown their concern for the use of geolocation tools by applications through their devices such as smartphones.
64% of Spaniards do not feel comfortable sharing information about their location with websites and applications, a percentage that has increased since 2016, when they registered 47%, according to a study conducted by the cybersecurity company Kaspersky Lab.
This concern of the Spanish is reflected even in other data such as that 57% of Spaniards fear that a third party can track them using the geolocation information of their device.
This fear of the Spanish is justified in the high number of applications that use geolocation. 83% of Android applications have access to the confidential data of their owners, and 96% of Android applications can be started without consent, according to Kaspersky data.
Despite this, half of Spanish respondents (51%) admit that they do not verify the permissions of their pre-installed mobile applications on their Android and iOS devices, and one in five (20%) does not either when downloading and installing new applications on their mobile devices.
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