Google recently started making some photos that you've
posted publicly to Google+ visible in Google Maps as
well, as evidenced by the notification we all got in
Google+. That's not in and of itself a bad thing, nor is it
an invasion of privacy. In order for an image to appear
automatically in Google Maps, it has to meet four criteria
as set by Google and enacted by you:
A photo must be public
A photo must have a location associated with it
A photo must be in a public album on your Google+,
with the "Show location" setting checked
A photo must adhere to Google's content policies
So Google Maps is only getting pics that you shared
publicly in the first place, with location attached. Not
evil, even if it does raise eyebrows for at least a few
seconds.
But it's also a good opportunity to remember that is
absolutely possible to post pictures to Google+ and
leave the location attached when you might otherwise
not want it made public. Say, pictures taken at home. Or
from someone else's home. And while it's easy to hide
locations of photos you've posted to Google+ from
website itself, currently there's no easy way to do it from
the Google+ app. (If there is and I'm just missing it,
please enlighten me.)
The good news is Google's actually made it sort-of easy
to see which pictures you've shared to Google+ have
locations attached to them, as well as which ones are
now shared on Google Maps. Go to g.co/views , then
click your name. (You'll need to be logged in,
obviously.) Then use the overflow menu on the right and
choose what you want to see. Click into the individual
picture, then hit the overflow menu again, and you can
mange the location sharing data.
OK, it's a few steps. And really, Google needs to make it
as easy to unshare your location as it is to share it in
the first place. But this is certainly better than nothing,
and it's worth taking a few minutes to audit what you're
sharing with whom.
Sunday, 21 September 2014
Your public Google+ images might now show in Google Maps
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