On Wednesday, Google announced it would soon change the way it would store and access users’ opt-in “Location History” in Google Maps, making the data retention period shorter, and making it impossible for the company to access it. That means it will no longer respond to “geofence warrants. a controversial legal tool used by local and federal authorities to force Google to hand over information about all users within a given location during a specific timeframe.
The company confirmed the impact of the change to Forbes . A current Google employee who was not authorized to speak publicly told Forbes that along with the obvious privacy benefits of encrypting location data, Google made the move to explicitly bring an end to geofence warrants using Google information.